Summary:
This is not mandated by the Standard, but it's nonetheless a nice
property to have, especially since it's so easy to implement. It
also shrinks our bug list!
PR41714
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62618
llvm-svn: 363075
Summary:
Following the discussion on the libcxx-dev mailing list
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/libcxx-dev/2019-May/000358.html),
this implements the new policy for handling experimental features and
their deprecation. We basically add a deprecation warning for
std::experimental::filesystem, and we remove a bunch of <experimental/*>
headers that were now empty.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, libcxx-commits, jfb
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62428
llvm-svn: 363072
Some tests require `TEST_WORKAROUND_CONSTEXPR_IMPLIES_NOEXCEPT`, but they
did not include the header that defines that macro.
Thanks to Michael Park for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62920
llvm-svn: 362660
This commit adds tests that repeated characters in regular expressions
are within numeric limits, and that a <= b in a regex like `x{a,b}`.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62816
llvm-svn: 362525
Summary:
This provides the `std::destroying_delete_t` declaration in C++2a and after. (Even when the compiler doesn't support the language feature).
However, the feature test macro `__cpp_lib_destroying_delete` is only defined when we have both language support and C++2a.
Reviewers: ldionne, ckennelly, serge-sans-paille, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: dexonsmith, riccibruno, christof, jwakely, jdoerfert, mclow.lists, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55840
llvm-svn: 361572
Some tests assume that iteration through an unordered multiset elements
will return them in the same order as at the container creation. This
assumption is not true since the container is unordered, so that no
specific order of elements is ever guaranteed for such container. This
patch introduces checks verifying that any iteration will return
elements exactly from a set of valid values and without repetition,
but in no particular order.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56500
llvm-svn: 361494
Some tests assume that iteration through an unordered multimap elements
will return them in the same order as at the container creation. This
assumption is not true since the container is unordered, so that no
specific order of elements is ever guaranteed for such container. This
patch is a continuation of D54838 and introduces checks verifying that
any iteration will return elements exactly from a set of valid values
and without repetition, but in no particular order.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56498
llvm-svn: 361414
The `using namespace std;` opens us up to ambiguity
when any of the std:: names are also present in the global namespace.
Instead we should properly qualify names we use from std::.
llvm-svn: 361074
Use std::nextafter() instead of std::nexttoward() in midpoint tests.
In the context of this test, this should not cause any difference.
Since nexttowardl() is not implemented on NetBSD 8, the latter function
combined with 'long double' type caused test failure. nextafterl() does
not have this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61748
llvm-svn: 360673
Drive-by:
* Fix potential race between check and update of `throw_one` in `operator new`
* Fix latent bug in `operator delete`, which shouldn't decrement `outstanding_new` when passed a null pointer
* Specifically catch the expected `bad_alloc` in `main` instead of `...`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50860
llvm-svn: 359827
Linux is failing even though the test runner does report this locale
is available, but the test still isn't expected to work on platforms
without the locale (like Android).
llvm-svn: 359726
This adds explicit support for the WASI platform to libcxx.
WASI libc uses some components from musl, however it's not fully compatible
with musl, so we're planning to stop using _LIBCPP_HAS_MUSL_LIBC and
customize for WASI libc specifically.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61336
Reviewers: sbc100, ldionne
llvm-svn: 359703
Summary:
The current implementation of aligned storage was written before we had `alignas`, so it used a list of builtin types to force the alignment. But this doesn't work overaligned requests.
This patch adds a fallback case supporting over-alignment. It only affects case that were previously ill-formed.
Reviewers: rsmith, ldionne, dlj, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: mclow.lists, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61301
llvm-svn: 359596
The standard requires the following for the std::regex_constants::error_type
values: "The type error_type is an implementation-defined enumerated type."
The values of this enumerated type are not required to be non-zero.
This patch makes such checks in tests libc++-specific to let the tests
pass for other conforming implementations.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61195
llvm-svn: 359320
When the arguments to tuple cat were const, the const was incorrectly
propagated into the type of the resulting tuple. For example:
const std::tuple<int> t(42);
auto r = std::tuple_cat(t, t);
// Incorrect! should be std::tuple<int, int>.
static_assert(is_same_v<decltype(r), std::tuple<const int, const int>>);
llvm-svn: 359255
All constant expressions are non-potentially-throwing in C++14, but that is *not* the case in C++17. Change these tests of the `variant`-flavored overloads of `std::get` to expect the correct behavior when the compiler is not GCC or is GCC 9+.
Credit to Jonathan Wakely for providing an improved version of my initial change that validates the incorrect behavior on GCC < 9 as well as validating the correct behavior on other compilers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61033
llvm-svn: 359220
Teach libcxx to stop using various deprecated __has_* type traits, in favor of
the ("modern", C++11 era) __is_* type traits.
This is mostly just a simplification, but fixes at least one bug: _Atomic T
should be considered trivially-destructible, but is not considered to be POD by
Clang, and __has_trivial_destructor is specified in the GCC documentation as
returning false for non-POD non-class types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48292
llvm-svn: 359159
Summary:
All overloads of `::abs` and `std::abs` must be present in both `<cmath>` and `<cstdlib>`. This is problematic to implement because C defines `fabs` in `math.h` and `labs` in `stdlib.h`. This introduces a circular dependency between the two headers.
This patch implements that requirement by moving `abs` into `math.h` and making `stdlib.h` include `math.h`. In order to get the underlying C declarations from the "real" `stdlib.h` inside our `math.h` we need some trickery. Specifically we need to make `stdlib.h` include next itself.
Suggestions for a cleaner implementation are welcome.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: krytarowski, fedor.sergeev, dexonsmith, jdoerfert, jsji, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60097
llvm-svn: 359020
Due to MSVC's decision to encode `wchar_t` as UTF-16, it rejects wide
character/string literals that expect a character value greater than
`\xffff`. UTF-16 `wchar_t` is clearly non-conforming, given that the
standard requires wchar_t to be capable of representing all characters
in the supported wide character execution sets, but rejecting e.g.
`\x40003` is a reasonably sane compromise given that encoding choice:
there's an expectation that `\xFOO` produces a single character in the
resulting literal. Consequently `L'\x40003'`/`L"\x40003"` are ill-formed
literals on MSVC. `L'\U00040003'` is a high surrogate (and produces a
warning about ignoring the "second character" in a multi-character
literal), and `L"\U00040003"` is a perfectly-valid `const wchar_t[3]`.
This change updates these tests to use universal-character-names instead
of raw values for the intended character values, which technically makes
them portable even to implementations that don't use a unicode
transformation format encoding for their wide character execution
character set. The two-character literal `L"\u1005e"` is awkward - the
`e` looks like part of the UCN's hex encoding - but necessary to compile
in '03 mode since '03 didn't allow UCNs to be used for members of the
basic execution character set even in character/string literals.
I've also eliminated the extraneous `\x00` "bonus null-terminator" in
some of the string literals which doesn't affect the tested behavior.
I'm sorry about using `*L"\U00040003"` in `conversions.string/to_bytes.pass.cpp`,
but it's correct for platforms with 32-bit wchar_t, *and* doesn't
trigger narrowing warnings as did the prior `CharT(0x40003)`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60950
llvm-svn: 358908
This is a followup to [1] which added a new `__debug_less::operator()` overload.
[2] added `_LIBCPP_CONSTEXPR_AFTER_CXX17` to the original
`__debug_less::operator()` between the time of writing [1] and landing it. This
change adds `_LIBCPP_CONSTEXPR_AFTER_CXX17` to the new overload too.
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/rL358423
[2] https://reviews.llvm.org/rL358252
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60724
llvm-svn: 358725
In r358591, I added a test that uses the debug database from multiple
threads and that helped us uncover the problem that was fixed in r355367.
However, the test broke the tsan CI bots, and I think the problem is the
test allocator that was used in the test (which is not thread safe).
I'm committing again without using the test allocator, and in a separate
test file.
llvm-svn: 358610
This reverts r358591, which seems to have uncovered an actual bug and
causes the tsan CI to fail. We need to fix the bug and re-commit the
test.
llvm-svn: 358593
There are many STL algorithms (such as lexicographical_compare) that compare
values pointed to by iterators like so:
__comp(*it1, *it2);
When building with `_LIBCPP_DEBUG=0`, comparators are wrapped in `__debug_less`
which does some additional validation. But `__debug_less::operator()` takes
non-const references, so if the type of `*it1` is int, not int&, then the build
will fail.
This change adds a `const&` overload for `operator()` to fix the build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60592
llvm-svn: 358423
We used to do it against the current system's libc++abi, which is not as
good as doing it with the libc++abi that matches the libc++ we're running
against.
Note that I made sure we were indeed picking up the provided libc++abi
by replacing it by something that doesn't work and watching it burn.
llvm-svn: 358294
Summary:
In r348529, I improved the library-defined diagnostic for using containers
with a non-const comparator/hasher. However, the check is now performed
too early, which leads to the diagnostic being emitted in cases where it
shouldn't. See PR41360 for details.
This patch moves the diagnostic to the destructor of the containers, which
means that the diagnostic will only be emitted when the container is instantiated
at a point where the comparator and the key/value are required to be complete.
We still retain better diagnostics than before r348529, because the diagnostics
are performed in the containers themselves instead of __tree and __hash_table.
As a drive-by fix, I improved the diagnostic to mention that we can't find
a _viable_ const call operator, as suggested by EricWF in PR41360.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, zoecarver
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60540
llvm-svn: 358189
We fixed incorrect behavior of input streams in r357775 and tests were
added accordingly. However, older versions of macOS don't have the
change in the dylib yet, so the tests fail on those platforms.
llvm-svn: 357794
Summary:
This is a re-application of r357533 and r357531. They had been reverted
because we thought the commits broke the LLDB data formatters, but it
turns out this was because only r357531 had been included in the CI
run.
Before this patch, we would only ever throw an exception if the badbit
was set on the stream. The Standard is currently very unclear on how
exceptions should be propagated and what error flags should be set by
the input stream operations. This commit changes libc++ to behave under
a different (but valid) interpretation of the Standard. This interpretation
of the Standard matches what other implementations are doing.
This effectively implements the wording in p1264r0. It hasn't been voted
into the Standard yet, however there is wide agreement that the fix is
correct and it's just a matter of time before the fix is standardized.
PR21586
PR15949
rdar://problem/15347558
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49863
llvm-svn: 357775
This builds on the work done in r342808 and adds _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT
to 37 more functions, namely:
adjacent_find, all_of, any_of, binary_search, clamp, count_if, count,
equal_range, equal, find_end, find_first_not_of, find_first_of, find_if,
find, includes, is_heap_until, is_heap, is_partitioned, is_permutation,
is_sorted_until, is_sorted, lexicographical_compare, lower_bound,
max_element, max, min_element, min, minmax_element, minmax, mismatch,
none_of, remove_if, remove, search_n, search, unique, upper_bound
The motivation here is that we noticed that find_if is nodiscard with
Visual Studio's standard library, and we deemed that useful
(https://crbug.com/948122).
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/cppblog/c17-progress-in-vs-2017-15-5-and-15-6/
says "Our criteria for emitting the warning are: discarding the return
value is a guaranteed leak [...], discarding the return value is
near-guaranteed to be incorrect (e.g. remove()/remove_if()/unique()), or
the function is essentially a pure observer (e.g. vector::empty() and
std::is_sorted())." so I went through algorithm and tried to apply these
criteria.
Some of these, like vector::empty() are already nodiscard per C++
standard and didn't need changing.
I didn't (yet?) go over std::string::find* methods which should probably
have _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT too (but not as part of this change).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60145
llvm-svn: 357619
Summary:
Otherwise, std::is_pointer<id __strong> works, but std::is_pointer<id __weak>
(and others) don't work as expected.
The previous patch (r357517) had to be reverted in r357569 because it
broke the Chromium build. This patch shouldn't have the same problem.
rdar://problem/49126333
Reviewers: ahatanak, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60087
llvm-svn: 357586
Fixed the inability to properly rebind the testing allocator, by making the
inner alloc_impl type a plain struct and making the operations templates. Before
rebind failed to compile complaining that a alloc_impl<T>* was not convertible
to an alloc_impl<U>*.
This enables the test to pass for MSVC++ once we provide the strong guarantee
for the copy assignment operator.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D60023
llvm-svn: 357545
This reverts commits r357533 and r357531, which broke the LLDB
data formatters. I'll hold off until we know how to fix the data
formatters accordingly.
llvm-svn: 357536
Summary:
Before this patch, we would only ever throw an exception if the badbit
was set on the stream. The Standard is currently very unclear on how
exceptions should be propagated and what error flags should be set by
the input stream operations. This commit changes libc++ to behave under
a different (but valid) interpretation of the Standard. This interpretation
of the Standard matches what other implementations are doing.
I will submit a paper in San Diego to clarify the Standard such that the
interpretation used in this commit (and other implementations) is the only
possible one.
PR21586
PR15949
rdar://problem/15347558
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49863
llvm-svn: 357531
The current definitions were entirely broken. They didn't call any
existing constructor and the forgot to friend the expression types they
were trying to construct.
llvm-svn: 357453
Summary: Completes P0357R3, which was merged into the C++20 Working Draft in San Diego.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54722
llvm-svn: 357423
Summary:
Currently the C++03 implementation of common_type has much different behavior than the C++11 one. This causes bugs, including inside `<chrono>`.
This patch unifies the two implementations as best it can. The more code they share, the less their behavior can diverge.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, sbenza
Reviewed By: mclow.lists, ldionne
Subscribers: libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59678
llvm-svn: 357370
Some tests #include <iostream> but they don't use anything from the
header. Those are probably artifacts of when the tests were developped.
llvm-svn: 357181
Dylib support for shared_mutex was added in macOS 10.12, so the tests
should be XFAILed accordingly instead of being completely disabled
whenever availability is enabled.
rdar://problem/48769104
llvm-svn: 357079
Summary:
Adds the coroutine `std::experimental::task<T>` type described in proposal P1056R0.
See https://wg21.link/P1056R0.
This implementation allows customization of the allocator used to allocate the
coroutine frame by passing std::allocator_arg as the first argument, followed by
the allocator to use.
This supports co_awaiting the same task multiple times. The second and
subsequent times it returns a reference to the already-computed value.
This diff also adds some implementations of other utilities that have potential for
standardization as helpers within the test/... area:
- `sync_wait(awaitable)` - See P1171R0
- `manual_reset_event`
Move the definition of the __aligned_allocation_size helper function
from <experimental/memory_resource> to <experimental/__memory>
so it can be more widely used without pulling in memory_resource.
Outstanding work:
- Use C++14 keywords directly rather than macro versions
eg. use `noexcept` instead of `_NOEXCEPT`).
- Add support for overaligned coroutine frames.
This may need wording in the Coroutines TS to support passing the extra `std::align_val_t`.
- Eliminate use of `if constexpr` if we want it to compile under C++14.
Patch by @lewissbaker (Lewis Baker).
llvm-svn: 357010
Summary: Filesystem doesn't work on Windows, so we need a mechanism to turn it off for the time being.
Reviewers: ldionne, serge-sans-paille, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: mstorsjo, mgorny, christof, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59619
llvm-svn: 356633
Summary:
Also add the corresponding XFAILs to tests that require filesystem.
The approach taken to mark <filesystem> as unavailable in this patch
is to mark all the header as unavailable using #pragma clang attribute.
Marking each declaration using the attribute is more intrusive and
does not provide a lot of value right now because pretty much everything
in <filesystem> requires dylib support, often transitively.
This is an alternative to https://reviews.llvm.org/D59093.
A similar (but partial) patch was already applied in r356558.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59224
llvm-svn: 356616
This fixes CI for back-deployment testers on platforms that don't have
<filesystem> support in the dylib.
This is effectively half of https://reviews.llvm.org/D59224. The other
half requires fixes in Clang.
llvm-svn: 356558
This silences a known issue, as can be seen by looking at similar
tests for other clocks, like time.clock.steady/consistency.pass.cpp.
llvm-svn: 356528
Summary:
This patch treats <filesystem> as a first-class citizen of the dylib,
like all other sub-libraries (e.g. <chrono>). As such, it also removes
all special handling for installing the filesystem library separately
or disabling part of the test suite from the lit command line.
Unlike the previous attempt (r356500), this doesn't remove all the
filesystem tests.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jfb, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59152
llvm-svn: 356518
When I applied r356500 (https://reviews.llvm.org/D59152), I somehow
deleted all of filesystem's tests. I will revert r356500 and re-apply
it properly.
llvm-svn: 356505
Summary:
This patch treats <filesystem> as a first-class citizen of the dylib,
like all other sub-libraries (e.g. <chrono>). As such, it also removes
all special handling for installing the filesystem library separately
or disabling part of the test suite from the lit command line.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jfb, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59152
llvm-svn: 356500
Summary:
The reason libc++ implemented a throwing debug mode handler was for ease of testing. Specifically,
I thought that if a debug violation aborted, we could only test one violation per file. This made
it impossible to test debug mode. Which throwing behavior we could test more!
However, the throwing approach didn't work either, since there are debug violations underneath noexcept
functions. This lead to the introduction of `_NOEXCEPT_DEBUG`, which was only noexcept when debug
mode was off.
Having thought more and having grown wiser, `_NOEXCEPT_DEBUG` was a horrible decision. It was
viral, it didn't cover all the cases it needed to, and it was observable to the user -- at worst
changing the behavior of their program.
This patch removes the throwing debug handler, and rewrites the debug tests using 'fork-ing' style
death tests.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, thomasanderson
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: christof, arphaman, libcxx-commits, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59166
llvm-svn: 356417
Even though the header makes the exact same check since https://llvm.org/D59063,
the headers could conceivably change in the future and introduce a bug.
llvm-svn: 356376
Summary:
In r342843, I added deprecation warnings to some facilities that were
deprectated in C++14 and C++17. However, those deprecation warnings
were not enabled by default.
After discussing this on IRC, we had finally gotten consensus to enable
those warnings by default, and I'm getting around to doing that only
now.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58140
llvm-svn: 355961
When Clang tries to complete a type containing `std::optional` it
considers the `in_place_t` constructor with no arguments which checks
if the value type is default constructible. If the value type is a
nested class type, then this check occurs too early and poisons the
is_default_constructible trait.
This patch makes optional deduce `in_place_t` so we can prevent
this early SFINAE evaluation. Technically this could break people
doing weird things with the in_place_t tag, but that seems less
important than making the nested class case work.
llvm-svn: 355877
comparator for std::sort()
Our debug comparator assumed that the comparator it wraps would always
accepts the values by const ref. This isn't required by the standard.
This patch makes our __debug_less comparator forward the constness.
llvm-svn: 355752
The issue is the following code:
__cn1->__add(*__ip);
(*__ip)->__c_ = __cn1;
`__ip` points into the array of iterators for container `__cn2`. This code adds
the iterator to the array of iterators for `__cn1`, and updates the iterator to
point to the new container.
This code works fine, except when `__cn1` and `__cn2` are the same container.
`__cn1->__add()` might need to grow the array of iterators, and when it does,
`__ip` becomes invalid, so the second line becomes a use-after-free error.
Simply swapping the order of the above two lines is not sufficient, because of
the memmove() below. The easiest and most performant solution is just to skip
touching any iterators if the containers are the same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58926
llvm-svn: 355550
Revert "[libc++] Fix <atomic> failures on GCC"
Revert "[libc++] Change memory_order to an enum class"
Revert "[libc++] decoupling Freestanding atomic<T> from libatomic.a"
The lldb formatter nededs to be updated. Shafik and Louis will
coordinate to do so.
llvm-svn: 355417
Summary:
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D58201, we turned memory_order into an enum
class in C++20 mode. However, we were not casting memory_order to its
underlying type correctly for the GCC implementation, which broke the
build bots. I also fixed a test that was failing in C++17 mode on GCC 5.
Reviewers: EricWF, jfb, mclow.lists
Subscribers: zoecarver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58966
llvm-svn: 355409
Summary:
This patch fixes a lifetime bug when inserting a new container into the debug database. It is
diagnosed by UBSAN when debug mode is enabled. This patch corrects how nodes are constructed
during insertion.
The fix requires unconditionally breaking the debug mode ABI. Users should not expect ABI
stability from debug mode.
Reviewers: ldionne, serge-sans-paille, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: mclow.lists, christof, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58011
llvm-svn: 355367
Do not assume that xalloc() starts at 0, which is not specified by the
Standard.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58299
llvm-svn: 355160
Those tests fail when linking against a new dylib but running against
macosx10.7. I believe this is caused by a duplicate definition of the
RTTI for exception classes in libc++.dylib and libc++abi.dylib, but
this matter still needs some investigation.
This issue was not caught previously because all the tests always linked
against the same dylib used for running (because LIT made it impossible
to do otherwise before r349171).
rdar://problem/46809586
llvm-svn: 354940
Summary:
Previously, we'd run some experimental tests even when enable_experimental=False
was used with lit.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, mclow.lists
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55834
llvm-svn: 354725
Summary:
A few places in the library seem to behave unexpectedly when the library
is compiled or used with exceptions disabled. For example, not throwing
an exception when a pointer is NULL can lead us to dereference the pointer
later on, which is UB. This patch fixes such occurences.
It's hard to tell whether there are other places where the no-exceptions
mode misbehaves like this, because the replacement for throwing an
exception does not always seem to be abort()ing, but at least this
patch will improve the situation somewhat.
See http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/libcxx-dev/2019-January/000172.html
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57761
llvm-svn: 353850
Summary:
Some implementations of fenv.h use macros to define the functions they provide. This can cause problems when `std::fegetround()` is spelled in source.
This patch adds a `fenv.h` header to libc++ for the sole purpose of turning those macros into real functions.
Reviewers: rsmith, mclow.lists, ldionne
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57729
llvm-svn: 353767
It turns out that I un-XFAILed too many tests in r353210: some tests
actually fail whether exceptions are enabled or not because they use
types that are marked as unavailable even when exceptions are disabled.
llvm-svn: 353215
Some tests are marked as failing on platforms where the dylib does not
provide the required exception classes. However, when testing with
exceptions disabled, those tests shouldn't be marked as failing.
llvm-svn: 353210
We're building tests with -nostdlib which means that we need to
explicitly include the builtins library. When using libgcc (default)
we can simply include -lgcc_s on the link line, but when using
compiler-rt builtins we need a complete path to the builtins library.
This path is already available in CMake as <PROJECT>_BUILTINS_LIBRARY,
so we just need to pass that path to lit and if config.compiler_rt is
true, link it to the test.
Prior to this patch, running tests when compiler-rt is being used as
the builtins library was broken as all tests would fail to link, but
with this change running tests when compiler-rt bultins library is
being used should be supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56701
llvm-svn: 353208
When the whole test only works starting at some version of the Standard,
use UNSUPPORTED lit markup instead of #ifdef TEST_STD_VER. This provides
more visibility into the test suite.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D57704.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 353206
This patch removes some vendor-specific availability XFAILs from the
test suite. In the future, when a new feature is introduced in the
dylib, an availability macro should be created and a matching lit
feature should be created. That way, the test suite can XFAIL whenever
the implementation lacks the necessary feature instead of being
cluttered by vendor-specific annotations.
Right now, those vendor-specific annotations are still somewhat cluttering
the test suite by being in `config.py`, but at least they are localized.
In the future, we could design a way to define those less intrusively or
even automatically based on the availability macros that already exist
in <__config>.
llvm-svn: 353201
There are several changes:
- Don't stringify Pythonized bools (that's why we're Pythonizing them)
- Support specifying target and sysroot via CMake variables
- Use consistent spelling for --target, --sysroot, --gcc-toolchain
llvm-svn: 353137
Summary:
Freestanding is *weird*. The standard allows it to differ in a bunch of odd
manners from regular C++, and the committee would like to improve that
situation. I'd like to make libc++ behave better with what freestanding should
be, so that it can be a tool we use in improving the standard. To do that we
need to try stuff out, both with "freestanding the language mode" and
"freestanding the library subset".
Let's start with the super basic: run the libc++ tests in freestanding, using
clang as the compiler, and see what works. The easiest hack to do this:
In utils/libcxx/test/config.py add:
self.cxx.compile_flags += ['-ffreestanding']
Run the tests and they all fail.
Why? Because in freestanding `main` isn't special. This "not special" property
has two effects: main doesn't get mangled, and main isn't allowed to omit its
`return` statement. The first means main gets mangled and the linker can't
create a valid executable for us to test. The second means we spew out warnings
(ew) and the compiler doesn't insert the `return` we omitted, and main just
falls of the end and does whatever undefined behavior (if you're luck, ud2
leading to non-zero return code).
Let's start my work with the basics. This patch changes all libc++ tests to
declare `main` as `int main(int, char**` so it mangles consistently (enabling us
to declare another `extern "C"` main for freestanding which calls the mangled
one), and adds `return 0;` to all places where it was missing. This touches 6124
files, and I apologize.
The former was done with The Magic Of Sed.
The later was done with a (not quite correct but decent) clang tool:
https://gist.github.com/jfbastien/793819ff360baa845483dde81170feed
This works for most tests, though I did have to adjust a few places when e.g.
the test runs with `-x c`, macros are used for main (such as for the filesystem
tests), etc.
Once this is in we can create a freestanding bot which will prevent further
regressions. After that, we can start the real work of supporting C++
freestanding fairly well in libc++.
<rdar://problem/47754795>
Reviewers: ldionne, mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, miyuki, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57624
llvm-svn: 353086
CMake has a standard way of setting target triple, sysroot and external
toolchain through CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_TARGET, CMAKE_SYSROOT and
CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_EXTERNAL_TOOLCHAIN. These are turned into
corresponding --target=, --sysroot= and --gcc-toolchain= variables add
included appended to CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS.
libunwind, libc++abi, libc++ provides their own mechanism through
<PROJECT>_TARGET_TRIPLE, <PROJECT>_SYSROOT and <PROJECT>_GCC_TOOLCHAIN
variables. These are also passed to lit via lit.site.cfg, and lit config
uses these to set the corresponding compiler flags when building tessts.
This means that there are two different ways of setting target, sysroot
and toolchain, but only one is properly supported in lit. This change
extends CMake build for libunwind, libc++abi and libc++ to also support
the CMake variables in addition to project specific ones in lit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57670
llvm-svn: 353084
On my Windows system, __allocator is defined to nothing. This change fixes build errors of the below form:
In file included from algorithm:644:
functional(1492,31): error: expected member name or ';' after declaration specifiers
const _Alloc& __allocator() const { return __f_.second(); }
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57355
llvm-svn: 352561
The meta-programming that attempted to form the invoke call expression
was not in a SFINAE context. This made it a hard error to provide
non-referencable types like 'void' or 'void (...) const'.
This patch fixes the error by checking the validity of the call
expression within a SFINAE context.
llvm-svn: 352522
glibc supports versioning, so it's possible to build against older
version and run against newer version. This is sometimes relied on
in practice, e.g. in Fuchsia build we build against older sysroot
(equivalent to Ubuntu Trusty) to cover the broadest possible range
of host systems, but that doesn't necessarily match the system that
binary is going to run on which may have newer version, in which case
the compile test used in curr_symbol is going to fail. Using runtime
check is more reliable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56702
llvm-svn: 352425
The unordered_set and unordered_multiset iterators are specified in the standard as follows:
using iterator = implementation-defined; // see [container.requirements]
using const_iterator = implementation-defined; // see [container.requirements]
using local_iterator = implementation-defined; // see [container.requirements]
using const_local_iterator = implementation-defined; // see [container.requirements]
The pairs iterator/const_iterator and local_iterator/const_local_iterator
are not required to be the same. The reasonable requirement would be that
iterator can convert to const_iterator and local_iterator can convert to
const_local_iterator. This patch weakens the check and makes the test
more portable.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D56493.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 352083
...so the tests under test/std/utilities/any continue to
compile with MSVC's standard library.
While we're here, let's test >C++17 features when _HAS_CXX20.
llvm-svn: 351991
D56445 bumped the minimum Mac OS X version required for aligned
allocation from 10.13 to 10.14. This caused libc++ tests depending
on the old value to break.
This patch updates the XFAILs for those tests to include 10.13.
llvm-svn: 351670
to reflect the new license. These used slightly different spellings that
defeated my regular expressions.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351648
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
D56445 bumped the minimum Mac OS X version required for aligned
allocation from 10.13 to 10.14. This caused libc++ tests depending
on the old value to break.
This patch updates the XFAILs for those tests to include 10.13.
llvm-svn: 351625
Summary:
FreeBSD ships a very old and deprecated ABI for std::pair where the copy and move constructors are not allowed to be trivial. D25389 change how this was implemented by introducing a non-trivial base class. This patch, introduced in October 2016, introduced an ABI bug that caused nested `std::pair` instantiations to have padding. For example:
```
using PairT = std::pair< std::pair<char, char>, char >;
static_assert(offsetof(PairT, first) == 0, "First member should exist at offset zero"); // Fails on FreeBSD!
```
The bug occurs because the base class for the first element (the nested pair) cannot be put at offset zero because the top-level pair already has the same base class laid out there.
This patch fixes that ABI bug by templating the dummy base class on the same parameters as the pair.
Technically this fix is an ABI break for users who depend on the "broken" ABI introduced in 2016. I'm putting this up for review so that the FreeBSD maintainers can sign off on fixing the ABI by breaking the ABI.
Another option, since we have to "break" the ABI to fix it, would be to move FreeBSD off the deprecated non-trivial pair ABI instead.
Also see:
* https://llvm.org/PR40230
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D21329
Reviewers: rsmith, dim, emaste
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: mclow.lists, krytarowski, christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56357
llvm-svn: 351290
Summary:
Starting in Clang 8.0 and GCC 8.0, `alignof` and `__alignof` return different values in same cases. Specifically `alignof` and `_Alignof` return the minimum alignment for a type, where as `__alignof` returns the preferred alignment. libc++ currently uses `__alignof` but means to use `alignof`. See llvm.org/PR39713
This patch introduces the macro `_LIBCPP_ALIGNOF` so we can control which spelling gets used.
This patch does not introduce any ABI guard to provide the old behavior with newer compilers. However, if we decide that is needed, this patch makes it trivial to implement.
I think we should commit this change immediately, and decide what we want to do about the ABI afterwards.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF
Reviewed By: ldionne, EricWF
Subscribers: jyknight, christof, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54814
llvm-svn: 351289
Summary:
This patch implements all the feature test macros libc++ currently supports, as specified by the standard or cppreference prior to C++2a.
The tests and `<version>` header are generated using a script. The script contains a table of each feature test macro, the headers it should be accessible from, and its values of each dialect of C++.
When a new feature test macro is added or needed, the table should be updated and the script re-run.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, jfb, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: arphaman, jfb, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56750
llvm-svn: 351286
Summary:
The tests need to create files larger than 2GB, but size_t is 32-bit
on a 32-bit system. Make use of explicit off64_t APIs so we can still
use a default off_t for the tests while enabling 64-bit file offsets
for create_file.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56619
llvm-svn: 351225
libc++ allows changing the namespace, don't assume __1 in the test
to avoid the test failure if different namespace is being used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56698
llvm-svn: 351220
Summary:
P0602R4 makes the special member functions of optional and variant
conditionally trivial based on the types in the optional/variant.
We already implemented that, but the tests were organized as if this
were a non-standard extension. This patch reorganizes the tests in a
way that makes more sense since this is not an extension anymore.
Reviewers: EricWF, mpark, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54772
llvm-svn: 350884
I have a big patch coming up, and this indirection is required to avoid hitting the following after my big change:
error: empty struct has size 0 in C, size 1 in C++ [-Werror,-Wextern-c-compat]
llvm-svn: 350772
There were 3 tests with 'int main(void)', and 6 with the return type on a different line. I'm about to send a patch for main in tests, and this NFC change is unrelated.
llvm-svn: 350770
Summary:
r306722 added diagnostics when aligned allocation is used with deployment
targets that do not support it, but the first macosx supporting aligned
allocation was incorrectly set to 10.13. In reality, the dylib shipped
with macosx10.13 does not support aligned allocation, but the dylib
shipped with macosx10.14 does.
Reviewers: ahatanak
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56445
llvm-svn: 350649
We already have a specialization that will use memcpy for construction
of trivial types from an iterator range like
std::vector<int>(int *, int *);
But if we have const-ness mismatch like
std::vector<int>(const int *, const int *);
we would use a slow path that copies each element individually. This change
enables the optimal specialization for const-ness mismatch. Fixes PR37574.
Contributions to the patch are made by Arthur O'Dwyer, Louis Dionne.
rdar://problem/40485845
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, ldionne, scanon
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, howard.hinnant, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48342
llvm-svn: 350583
This patch changes <experimental/foo> to use #warning instead of
is harmful to common feature detection idioms.
We should also consider only emitting the warning when __DEPRECATED is
defined, like we do in the <ext/foo> headers. Users may want to specify
"-Werror=-W#warnings" while still ignoring the libc++ warnings.
llvm-svn: 350485
last_write_time(sym, new_time) changes the modification time of the file
referenced by the symlink. But reading through the symlink may change the
symlinks's access time.
This meant the previous test that checked that the symlinks access
time was unchanged was incorrect and made the test flaky.
This patch removes this test (there really is no non-flaky way
to test that the new access time coorisponds to the time at which
the symlink was last dereferenced). This should unflake the test.
llvm-svn: 350478
This patch implements path::compare according to the current spec. The
only observable change is the ordering of "/foo" and "foo", which orders
the two paths based on having or not having a root directory (instead
of lexically comparing "/" to "foo").
llvm-svn: 349881
Some tests assume that iteration through an unordered multimap elements
will return them in the same order as at the container creation. This
assumption is not true since the container is unordered, so that no
specific order of elements is ever guaranteed for such container. This
patch introduces checks verifying that any iteration will return elements
exactly from a set of valid values and without repetition, but in no
particular order.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D54838.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 349780
Makes libc++ behavior consistent between C++03 and C++11.
Can use `decltype` in C++03 because `include/__config` defines a macro when
`decltype` is not available.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, erik.pilkington, ldionne
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: dexonsmith, cfe-commits, howard.hinnant, ldionne, christof, jkorous, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48753
llvm-svn: 349676
That test doesn't fail anymore since r349378, since the assertions that
r349378 removed must have been bugs in the dylib at some point.
llvm-svn: 349484
This test was initially marked as XFAIL using `XFAIL: macosx10.YY`, and
was then moved to `UNSUPPORTED: macosx10.YY`. The intent is to mark the
test as XFAILing when a deployment target older than macosx10.14 is used,
and the right way to do this is `XFAIL: availability=macosx10.YY`.
llvm-svn: 349426
Add a target_info definition for NetBSD. The definition is based
on the one used by FreeBSD, with libcxxrt replaced by libc++abi,
and using llvm-libunwind since we need to use its unwinder
implementation to build anyway.
Additionally, XFAIL the 30 tests that fail because of non-implemented
locale features. According to the manual, NetBSD implements only
LC_CTYPE part of locale handling. However, there is a locale database
in the system and locale specifications are validated against it,
so it makes sense to list the common locales as supported.
If I'm counting correctly, this change enables additional 43 passing
tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55767
llvm-svn: 349379
Remove the two test cases for \xDA and \xFA with UTF-8 locale, as both
characters alone are invalid in UTF-8 (short sequences). Upon removing
them, the test passes on Linux again (and also on NetBSD, after adding
appropriate locale configuration).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55746
llvm-svn: 349378
This is a re-application of r345525, which had been reverted by fear of
a regression.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D53994.
Thanks to Denis Yaroshevskiy for the patch.
llvm-svn: 349358
Replace the mknod() call with socket() + bind() for creating unix
sockets. The mknod() method is not portable and does not work
on NetBSD while binding the socket should work on all systems supporting
unix sockets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55576
llvm-svn: 349305
Explicitly disable the -Wformat-zero-length diagnostic when running
ctime tests, since one of the test cases passes zero-length format
string to strftime(). When strftime() is appropriately decorated
with __attribute__(format, ...), this caused the test to fail because
of this warning (e.g. on NetBSD).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55661
llvm-svn: 349294
Also, add tests making sure that vector and deque both catch the problem
when assertions are enabled. Otherwise, deque would segfault and vector
would never terminate.
llvm-svn: 348994
Summary:
std::tuple marks its constructors as noexcept when the corresponding
memberwise constructors are noexcept too -- this commit improves std::pair
so that it behaves the same.
This is a re-application of r348824, which broke the build in C++03 mode
because a test was marked as supported in C++03 when it shouldn't be.
Note:
I did not add support in the explicit and non-explicit `pair(_Tuple&& __p)`
constructors because those are non-standard extensions, and supporting them
properly is tedious (we have to copy the rvalue-referenceness of the deduced
_Tuple&& onto the result of tuple_element).
<rdar://problem/29537079>
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48669
llvm-svn: 348847
Summary:
std::tuple marks its constructors as noexcept when the corresponding
memberwise constructors are noexcept too -- this commit improves std::pair
so that it behaves the same.
Note:
I did not add support in the explicit and non-explicit `pair(_Tuple&& __p)`
constructors because those are non-standard extensions, and supporting them
properly is tedious (we have to copy the rvalue-referenceness of the deduced
_Tuple&& onto the result of tuple_element).
<rdar://problem/29537079>
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48669
llvm-svn: 348824
Summary:
When providing a non-const-callable comparator in a map or set, the
warning diagnostic does not include the point of instantiation of
the container that triggered the warning, which makes it difficult
to track down the problem. This commit improves the diagnostic by
placing it directly in the body of the associative container.
The same change is applied to unordered associative containers, which
had a similar problem.
Finally, this commit cleans up the forward declarations of several
map and unordered_map helpers, which are not needed anymore.
<rdar://problem/41370747>
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48955
llvm-svn: 348529
The tests were marked to fail based on the 'availability' LIT feature.
However, those tests should really only be failing when we run them
against the dylibs that were deployed on macosx10.7 and macosx10.8,
which the deployment target has nothing to do with.
This caused the tests to unexpectedly pass when running the tests
with deployment target macosx10.{7,8} but running with a recent dylib.
llvm-svn: 348520
The standard section [array.zero] requires the return value of begin()
and end() methods of a zero-sized array to be unique. Eric Fiselier
clarifies: "That unique value cannot be null, and must be properly aligned".
This patch adds checks for the first part of this clarification: unique
value returned by these methods cannot be null.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D55366.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 348509
The section array.zero says: "The return value of data() is unspecified".
This patch marks all checks of the array<T, 0>.data() return value as
libc++ specific.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D55364.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 348485
Whether an explicit instantiation declaration should be provided is not
a matter of availability markup.
This problem is exemplified by the fact that some tests were incorrectly
marked as XFAIL when they should instead have been using the definition
of streams from the headers, and hence passing, and that, regardless of
whether visibility annotations are enabled.
llvm-svn: 348436
Summary:
This was voted into C++20 in San Diego. Note that there was a revision
D0318R2 which did include unwrap_reference_t, but we mistakingly voted
P0318R1 into the C++20 Working Draft (which does not include
unwrap_reference_t). This patch implements D0318R2, which is what
we'll end up with in the Working Draft once this mistake has been
fixed.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54485
llvm-svn: 348138
The test was previously marked as unsupported on all Apple platforms, when
we really just want to mark it as unsupported for previously shipped dylibs
on macosx.
llvm-svn: 347920
Summary:
std::bad_array_length was added by n3467, but this never made it into C++.
This commit removes the definition of std::bad_array_length from the headers
AND from the shared library. See the comments in the ABI changelog for details
about the ABI implications of this change.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, dexonsmith, howard.hinnant, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54804
llvm-svn: 347903
This reverts commit 087f065cb0c7463f521a62599884493aaee2ea12.
The tests were failing on 32 bit builds, and I don't have time
to clean them up right now. I'll recommit tomorrow with fixed tests.
llvm-svn: 347816
Summary:
Starting in Clang 8.0 and GCC 8.0, `alignof` and `__alignof` return different values in same cases. Specifically `alignof` and `_Alignof` return the minimum alignment for a type, where as `__alignof` returns the preferred alignment. libc++ currently uses `__alignof` but means to use `alignof`. See llvm.org/PR39713
This patch introduces the macro `_LIBCPP_ALIGNOF` so we can control which spelling gets used.
This patch does not introduce any ABI guard to provide the old behavior with newer compilers. However, if we decide that is needed, this patch makes it trivial to implement.
I think we should commit this change immediately, and decide what we want to do about the ABI afterwards.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54814
llvm-svn: 347787
Summary:
std::dynarray had been proposed for C++14, but it was pulled out from C++14
and there are no plans to standardize it anymore.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54801
llvm-svn: 347783
This patch adds an implementation of __resize_default_init as
described in P1072R2. Additionally, it uses it in filesystem to
demonstrate its intended utility.
Once P1072 lands, or if it changes it's interface, I will adjust
the internal libc++ implementation to match.
llvm-svn: 347589
In r339743, I marked several aligned allocation tests as downright
unsupported on macosx in an attempt to unbreak the build. It turns
out that marking them as unuspported whenever we're on OS X is way
too coarse grained. This commit marks the tests as XFAIL with more
granularity.
llvm-svn: 347585
The test was marked as failing whenever the deployment target was 10.12
or older, but in reality the test passes when the deployment target is
10.12 on recent Clangs. This happens because only older clangs do not
honor the -faligned-allocation flag, which disables any availability
error related to aligned allocation support, regardless of the
deployment target.
llvm-svn: 347580
Summary:
In PR39232, we noticed that some variant tests started failing in C++2a mode
with recent Clangs, because the rules for literal types changed in C++2a. As
a result, a temporary fix was checked in (enabling the test only in C++17).
This commit is what I believe should be the long term fix: I removed the
tests that checked constexpr default-constructibility with a weird type
from the tests for index() and valueless_by_exception(), and instead I
added tests for those using an obviously literal type in the test for the
default constructor.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, libcxx-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54767
llvm-svn: 347568
This is a revert of r347421, except I'm using the with_system_cxx_lib
lit feature instead of availability to mark the test as unsupported
(because the problem is a bug in the dylib itself). In r347421, I said
I wasn't able to reproduce the issue and that's why I was removing it:
this was because I ran lit slightly wrong. The problem mentioned really
exists.
llvm-svn: 347475
The iterator types for different specializations of containers with the
same element type but different allocators are not required to be
convertible. This patch makes the test to take the iterator type from
the same container specialization as the created container.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D54806.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 347423
I wasn't able to reproduce the issue referred to by the comment using
the libc++'s shipped with mac OS X 10.7 and 10.8, so I assume this may
have been fixed in a function that is now shipped in the headers. In
that case, the tests will pass no matter what dylib we're using.
In the worst case, some test bots will start failing and I'll understand
why I was wrong, and I can create an actual lit feature for it. Note
that I could just leave this test alone, but this change is on the path
towards eradicating vendor-specific availability markup from the test
suite.
llvm-svn: 347421
The XFAIL started passing since we're only testing for trivial-copyability of
reference_wrapper in C++14 and above. This commit constrains the XFAIL to
gcc-4.9 with C++14 (it would also fail on C++17 and above, but those standards
are not available with GCC 4.9).
llvm-svn: 347264
Some tests use type std::max_align_t, but don't include <cstddef> header
directly. As a result, these tests won't compile against some conformant
libraries.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D54645.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 347232
A bunch of unordered containers tests call library functions but don't directly
include the corresponding header files:
- fabs() (defined in <cmath> which is not included);
- is_permutation() (defined in <algorithm> which is not included);
- next() (defined in <iterator> which is not included).
- As a result, these tests won't compile against some conformant libraries.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D54643.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 347085
This was implicitly converting [1, 3] to bool, which triggers
an MSVC warning. The test should just pass `true`, which is
simpler, has the same behavior, and avoids the warning. (This
is a library test, not a compiler test, and the conversion happens
before calling `push_back`, so passing [1, 3] isn't interesting
in any way. This resembles a previous change to stop passing
`1 == 1` in the `vector<bool>` tests.)
llvm-svn: 346910
This patch renames the cxx-benchmark-unittests to check-cxx-benchmarks
and converts the target to use LIT in order to make the tests run faster
and provide better output.
In particular this runs each benchmark in a suite one by one, allowing
more parallelism while ensuring output isn't garbage with multiple threads.
Additionally, it adds the CMake flag '-DLIBCXX_BENCHMARK_TEST_ARGS=<list>'
to specify what options are passed when running the benchmarks.
llvm-svn: 346888
Summary:
P1006 adds support for constexpr in the specialization of pointer_traits
for raw pointers. This is necessary in order to use pointer_traits in
the upcoming constexpr containers. We expect P1006 to be voted into the
working draft for C++20 at the San Diego meeting.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53867
llvm-svn: 346764
This patch adds tests to ensure that multiset/unordered_multiset's emplace
method correctly constructs the elements without any intervening
constructions.
llvm-svn: 346743
Summary:
This fixes an regression when using bionic introduced in r345173.
I need to follow up and figure out what exactly is implied by
TEST_HAS_C11_FEATURES and see what the correct configuration is for
bionic (new versions should have everything the tests care about,
versions that predate C11 certainly don't), but this gets the tests
back to the old behavior.
Reviewers: EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: mclow.lists, christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53956
llvm-svn: 345900
This reverts r345525. I'm reverting because that patch apparently caused
a regression on certain platforms (see https://reviews.llvm.org/D53994).
Since we don't fully understand the reasons for the regression, I'm
reverting until we can provide a fix we understand.
llvm-svn: 345893
This commit adds a merge member function to all the map and set containers,
which splices nodes from the source container. This completes support for
P0083r3.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48896
llvm-svn: 345744
The types/comparators passed to std::upper_bound and std::lower_bound
are not required to provided to provide an operator</comp(...) which
accepts the arguments in reverse order. Nor are the ranges required
to have a strict weak ordering.
However, in debug mode we attempted to check the result of a comparison
with the arguments reversed, which may not compiler.
This patch removes the use of the debug comparator for upper_bound
and lower_bound.
equal_range et al still use debug comparators when they call
__upper_bound and __lower_bound.
See llvm.org/PR39458
llvm-svn: 345434
Summary:
C++14 sized deallocation is disabled by default due to ABI concerns. However, when a user manually enables it then libc++ should take advantage of it since sized deallocation can provide a significant performance win depending on the underlying malloc implementation. (Note that libc++'s definitions of sized delete don't do anything special yet, but users are free to provide their own).
This patch updates __libcpp_deallocate to selectively call sized operator delete when it's available. `__libcpp_deallocate_unsized` should be used when the size of the allocation is unknown.
On Apple this patch makes no attempt to determine if the sized operator delete is unavailable, only that the language feature is enabled. This could cause a compile error when using `std::allocator`, but the same compile error would occur whenever the user calls `new`, so I don't think it's a problem.
Reviewers: ldionne, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: rsmith, ckennelly, libcxx-commits, christof
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53120
llvm-svn: 345281
Summary:
C++14 sized deallocation is disabled by default due to ABI concerns. However, when a user manually enables it then libc++ should take advantage of it since sized deallocation can provide a significant performance win depending on the underlying malloc implementation. (Note that libc++'s definitions of sized delete don't do anything special yet, but users are free to provide their own).
This patch updates __libcpp_deallocate to selectively call sized operator delete when it's available. `__libcpp_deallocate_unsized` should be used when the size of the allocation is unknown.
On Apple this patch makes no attempt to determine if the sized operator delete is unavailable, only that the language feature is enabled. This could cause a compile error when using `std::allocator`, but the same compile error would occur whenever the user calls `new`, so I don't think it's a problem.
Reviewers: ldionne, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: rsmith, ckennelly, libcxx-commits, christof
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53120
llvm-svn: 345214
This reverts commits r333103 and r333108. _Float16 and __fp16 are C11
extensions and compilers other than Clang don't define these for C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53670
llvm-svn: 345199
Summary:
Some tests (mainly the new C++20 calendar library) fail when libc++ is
tested with '--param=std=c++98'. The failures happen because the tests
actually don't support C++98, but don't mention C++98 in the
'UNSUPPORTED:' line.
This change fixes the issue.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: arphaman, michaelplatings, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53640
llvm-svn: 345148
The test is trying to avoid saying aligned_alloc on Windows' UCRT, which does not (and can not) implement aligned_alloc. However, it's testing for c1xx, meaning clang on Windows will fail this test when using the UCRT.
llvm-svn: 344829
In this example, the ctor of G runs in the main thread in the expression G(), and also in the copy ctor of G() in the DECAY_COPY inside std::thread. The main thread destroys the G() instance at the semicolon, and the started thread destroys the G() after it returns. Thus there is a race between the threads on the n_alive variable.
The fix is to join with the background thread before attempting to destroy the G in the main thread.
llvm-svn: 344820
Revert r344535 "Wrap up the new chrono literals in an #ifdef..."
Revert r344546 "Mark a couple of test cases as 'C++17-only'..."
Some of the buildbot failures were masked by another error,
and this one was probably missed.
llvm-svn: 344580
While __cplusplus was only used a few dozen times, TEST_STD_VAR is used
more than 2000 times. So we replace the former by the latter for
consistency in the tests. There should be no functional change.
llvm-svn: 344194
Summary:
Scoped capabilities need to be annotated as such, otherwise the thread
safety analysis won't work as intended.
Fixes PR39234.
Reviewers: ldionne
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: christof, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53049
llvm-svn: 344096
PR38682 added a test to check for a race condition in std::future.
Part of the fix is part of the dylib, but there is no released version
of mac OS X that ships a dylib containing the fix. Hence, this test can
(and sometimes does) when testing on OS X. This commit marks the test
as unsupported to avoid spurious failures.
llvm-svn: 344053
Debian build bots are running Clang 4, which apparently does not support
the "deprecated" attribute properly. Clang pretends to support the attribute,
but the attribute doesn't do anything.
(live example: https://wandbox.org/permlink/0De69aXns0t1D59r)
On a separate note, I'm not sure I understand why we're even running the
libc++ tests under Clang-4. Is this a configuration we support? I can
understand that libc++ should _build_ with Clang 4, but it's not clear
to me that new libc++ headers should be usable under older compilers
like that.
llvm-svn: 342854
Summary:
These deprecation warnings are opt-in: they are only enabled when the
_LIBCXX_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS macro is defined, which is not the case
by default. Note that this is a first step in the right direction, but
I wasn't able to get an exhaustive list of all deprecated components
per standard, so there's certainly stuff that's missing. The list of
components this commit marks as deprecated is:
in C++11:
- auto_ptr, auto_ptr_ref
- binder1st, binder2nd, bind1st(), bind2nd()
- pointer_to_unary_function, pointer_to_binary_function, ptr_fun()
- mem_fun_t, mem_fun1_t, const_mem_fun_t, const_mem_fun1_t, mem_fun()
- mem_fun_ref_t, mem_fun1_ref_t, const_mem_fun_ref_t, const_mem_fun1_ref_t, mem_fun_ref()
in C++14:
- random_shuffle()
in C++17:
- unary_negate, binary_negate, not1(), not2()
<rdar://problem/18168350>
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48912
llvm-svn: 342843
One of the SIMD tests attempted to left shift a value by 42, which
is UB when the left hand side is a 32 bit integer type.
This patch adjusts the test to use the value 4 instead of 42.
llvm-svn: 342820
In rL342814, i have committed a blind fix to unbreak the asan buildbot,
but as it was later discussed, the leak is intentional,
so we can not fix the failure that way.
So this reverts the leak 'fix',
and simply disables the test in the presence of ASAN.
llvm-svn: 342819
Summary:
The `[[nodiscard]]` attribute is intended to help users find bugs where
function return values are ignored when they shouldn't be. After C++17 the
C++ standard has started to declared such library functions as `[[nodiscard]]`.
However, this application is limited and applies only to dialects after C++17.
Users who want help diagnosing misuses of STL functions may desire a more
liberal application of `[[nodiscard]]`.
For this reason libc++ provides an extension that does just that! The
extension must be enabled by defining `_LIBCPP_ENABLE_NODISCARD`. The extended
applications of `[[nodiscard]]` takes two forms:
1. Backporting `[[nodiscard]]` to entities declared as such by the
standard in newer dialects, but not in the present one.
2. Extended applications of `[[nodiscard]]`, at the libraries discretion,
applied to entities never declared as such by the standard.
Users may also opt-out of additional applications `[[nodiscard]]` using
additional macros.
Applications of the first form, which backport `[[nodiscard]]` from a newer
dialect may be disabled using macros specific to the dialect it was added. For
example `_LIBCPP_DISABLE_NODISCARD_AFTER_CXX17`.
Applications of the second form, which are pure extensions, may be disabled
by defining `_LIBCPP_DISABLE_NODISCARD_EXT`.
This patch was originally written by me (Roman Lebedev),
then but then reworked by Eric Fiselier.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, thakis, EricWF
Reviewed By: thakis, EricWF
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mclow.lists, lebedev.ri, EricWF, rjmccall, Quuxplusone, cfe-commits, christof
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45179
llvm-svn: 342808
This reverts r342566 as it causes on bots linker errors like
> Undefined symbols for architecture i386:
> "std::__1::basic_ostream<char, std::__1::char_traits<char> >::operator<<(std::nullptr_t)", referenced from:
llvm-svn: 342599
type.
Libc++ correctly asserts that a set of visitors for a variant all
return the same type. However, we use the visitation machinary to
perform relational operations. This causes a static assertion when
some of the alternatives relops return a UDT which is implicitly
convertible to bool instead of 'bool' exactly.
llvm-svn: 342560
Summary:
This commit fixes a regression introduced in r316095, where we don't match
inverted character classes when there's no negated characrers in the []'s.
rdar://problem/43060054
Reviewers: mclow.lists, timshen, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50534
llvm-svn: 340609
Summary:
The state associated to the future was set in one thread (with synchronization)
but read in another thread without synchronization, which led to a data race.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38181
rdar://problem/42548261
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51170
llvm-svn: 340608
It looks like this test XPASSes when the deployment target is older than
the OS of the system the test is running on. It looks like we run the
tests with -mmacosx-version-min=10.12, and that makes the test expect to
fail, but it passes.
llvm-svn: 340427
These algorithms require a ForwardIterator or better. Ensure
we diagnose the contract violation at compile time instead of
of silently doing the wrong thing.
Further algorithms will be audited in upcoming patches.
llvm-svn: 340426
Summary:
When a seed sequence would lead to having no non-zero significant bits
in the initial state of a `mersenne_twister_engine`, the fallback is to
flip the most significant bit of the first value that appears in the
textual representation of the initial state.
rand.eng.mers describes this as setting the value to be 2 to the power
of one less than w; the previous value encoded in the implementation,
namely one less than "2 to the power of w", is replaced by the correct
value in this patch.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, jasonliu
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: mclow.lists, jasonliu, EricWF, christof, ldionne, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50736
llvm-svn: 339969
Because FreeBSD uses _M in its <sys/types.h>, and it is hard to avoid
including that header, only define _M to NASTY_MACRO for other operating
systems. This fixes almost 2000 unexpected test failures.
Discussed with Eric Fiselier.
llvm-svn: 339794
Summary:
Since r338934, Clang emits an error when aligned allocation functions are
used in conjunction with a system libc++ dylib that does not support those
functions. This causes some tests to fail when testing against older libc++
dylibs. This commit marks those tests as UNSUPPORTED, and also documents the
various reasons for the tests being unsupported.
Reviewers: vsapsai, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, mclow.lists, EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50341
llvm-svn: 339743
Summary:
Those tests are breaking the test bots. A Bugzilla has been filed to
make sure those tests are re-enabled: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38572
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: krytarowski, christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50748
llvm-svn: 339742
Summary:
The macro was not defined in C++11 mode when it should have been, at least
according to how _LIBCPP_HAS_C11_FEATURES is defined.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, jfb, dexonsmith
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50719
llvm-svn: 339702
Summary:
These #includes are quite important, since otherwise any
#if TEST_STD_VER > 14 && defined(TEST_HAS_C11_FEATURES)
checks are always false, and so we don't actually test for C11 support
in the standard library.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50674
llvm-svn: 339675
Summary:
The current code enables aligned allocation functions when compiling in C++17
and later. This is a problem because aligned allocation functions might not
be supported on the target platform, which leads to an error at link time.
Since r338934, Clang knows not to define __cpp_aligned_new when it's not
available on the target platform -- this commit takes advantage of that to
only use aligned allocation functions when they are available.
Reviewers: vsapsai, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, EricWF, mclow.lists
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50344
llvm-svn: 339431
(Still pending review at https://reviews.llvm.org/D47400 which has been open since may; will ask for forgiveness rather than permission :) )
llvm-svn: 339214
I'm not sure if libcxx is asserting UTF-8 here; but on Windows the full char value is always passed through in its entirety, since the default codepage is something like Windows-1252. The replacement character is only used for non-chars there; and that should be a more portable test everywhere.
(Still pending review at https://reviews.llvm.org/D47395 which has been open since may; will ask for forgiveness rather than permission :) )
llvm-svn: 339213
Summary:
Major QoI considerations:
- The facility is backported to C++14, same as libstdc++.
- Efforts have been made to minimize the header dependencies.
- The design is friendly to the uses of MSVC intrinsics (`__emulu`, `_umul128`, `_BitScanForward`, `_BitScanForward64`) but not implemented; future contributions are welcome.
Thanks to Milo Yip for contributing the implementation of `__u64toa` and `__u32toa`.
References:
https://wg21.link/p0067r5https://wg21.link/p0682r1
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: ldionne, Quuxplusone, christof, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41458
llvm-svn: 338479
This commit adds a node handle type, (located in __node_handle), and adds
extract() and insert() members to all map and set types, as well as their
implementations in __tree and __hash_table.
The second half of this feature is adding merge() members, which splice nodes
in bulk from one container into another. This will be committed in a follow-up.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46845
llvm-svn: 338472
Summary:
This patch adds a new macro _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_VECTOR_EXTENSION for detecting
whether a vector extension (\_\_attribute\_\_((vector_size(num_bytes)))) is
available.
On the top of that, this patch implements the following API:
* all constructors
* operator[]
* copy_from
* copy_to
It also defines simd_abi::native to use vector extension, if available.
In GCC and Clang, certain values with vector extension are passed by registers,
instead of memory.
Based on D41148.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits, MaskRay, lichray, sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41376
llvm-svn: 338309
The bots were failing to build the cxx_filesystem target, so the
tests were failing. Though this does lead me to wonder how it
was ever working with c++experimental.
llvm-svn: 338095
This patch implements the <filesystem> header and uses that
to provide <experimental/filesystem>.
Unlike other standard headers, the symbols needed for <filesystem>
have not yet been placed in libc++.so. Instead they live in the
new libc++fs.a library. Users of filesystem are required to link this
library. (Also note that libc++experimental no longer contains the
definition of <experimental/filesystem>, which now requires linking libc++fs).
The reason for keeping <filesystem> out of the dylib for now is that
it's still somewhat experimental, and the possibility of requiring an
ABI breaking change is very real. In the future the symbols will likely
be moved into the dylib, or the dylib will be made to link libc++fs automagically).
Note that moving the symbols out of libc++experimental may break user builds
until they update to -lc++fs. This should be OK, because the experimental
library provides no stability guarantees. However, I plan on looking into
ways we can force libc++experimental to automagically link libc++fs.
In order to use a single implementation and set of tests for <filesystem>, it
has been placed in a special `__fs` namespace. This namespace is inline in
C++17 onward, but not before that. As such implementation is available
in C++11 onward, but no filesystem namespace is present "directly", and
as such name conflicts shouldn't occur in C++11 or C++14.
llvm-svn: 338093
Summary:
The ``file_time_type`` time point is used to represent the write times for files.
Its job is to act as part of a C++ wrapper for less ideal system interfaces. The
underlying filesystem uses the ``timespec`` struct for the same purpose.
However, the initial implementation of ``file_time_type`` could not represent
either the range or resolution of ``timespec``, making it unsuitable. Fixing
this requires an implementation which uses more than 64 bits to store the
time point.
I primarily considered two solutions: Using ``__int128_t`` and using a
arithmetic emulation of ``timespec``. Each has its pros and cons, and both
come with more than one complication.
However, after a lot of consideration, I decided on using `__int128_t`. This patch implements that change.
Please see the [FileTimeType Design Document](http://libcxx.llvm.org/docs/DesignDocs/FileTimeType.html) for more information.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, joerg, arthur.j.odwyer, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, K-ballo, cfe-commits, BillyONeal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49774
llvm-svn: 337960
Tuple has tests that ensure we diagnose non-lifetime extended
reference bindings inside tuples constructors. As of yesterday,
Clang now does this for us.
Adjust the test to tolerate the new diagnostics, while still
testing that we emit diagnostics of our own. Maybe after this
version of Clang has been adopted by most users we should
remove our diagnostics; but for now more error detection is
better!
llvm-svn: 337905
Libc++ was incorrectly reporting an error when the target of create_directory
already exists, but was not a directory. This behavior is not specified
in the most recent standard, which says no error should be reported.
Additionally, libc++ failed to report an error when the attribute directory
path didn't exist or didn't name a directory. This has been fixed as well.
Although it's not clear if we should call status or symlink_status on the
attribute directory. This patch chooses to still call status.
llvm-svn: 337888
Previously the <experimental/filesystem> didn't guard its
contents in any dialect. However, the implementation implicitly
requires at least C++11, and the tests have always been marked
unsupported in C++03. This patch puts a header guard around the
contents to avoid exposing them before C++11.
Additionally, it replaces all of the usages of _NOEXCEPT or
_LIBCPP_CONSTEXPR with the keyword directly, since we can
expect the compiler to implement those by now.
llvm-svn: 337884
Summary:
This is not guaranteed to work since the characters after '__has_include('
have special lexing rules that can't possibly be applied when
__has_include is generated by a macro. It also breaks the crash reproducers
generated by -frewrite-includes (see https://llvm.org/pr37990).
Reviewers: EricWF, rsmith, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49067
llvm-svn: 337824
When adding the new tests for the filesystem_error::what method,
I incorrectly removed a test case and replaced it with something else.
This patch restores that test case
llvm-svn: 337764
This patch implements the `what()` for filesystem errors. The message
includes the 'what_arg', any paths that were specified, and the
error code message.
Additionally this patch refactors how errors are created, making it easier
to report them correctly.
llvm-svn: 337664
This patch improves both the performance, and the safety of the
copy_file implementation.
The performance improvements are achieved by using sendfile on
Linux and copyfile on OS X when available.
The TOCTOU hardening is achieved by opening the source and
destination files and then using fstat to check their attributes to
see if we can copy them.
Unfortunately for the destination file, there is no way to open
it without accidentally creating it, so we first have to use
stat to determine if it exists, and if we should copy to it.
Then, once we're sure we should try to copy, we open the dest
file and ensure it names the same entity we previously stat'ed.
llvm-svn: 337649
First, <experimental/filesystem> didn't correctly guard
against min/max macros. This adds the proper push/pop macro guards.
Second, an internal time helper had been renamed but the test for
it hadn't been updated. This patch updates those tests.
llvm-svn: 337520
Summary:
This patch implements directory_entry caching *almost* as specified in P0317r1. However, I explicitly chose to deviate from the standard as I'll explain below.
The approach I decided to take is a fully caching one. When `refresh()` is called, the cache is populated by calls to `stat` and `lstat` as needed.
During directory iteration the cache is only populated with the `file_type` as reported by `readdir`.
The cache can be in the following states:
* `_Empty`: There is nothing in the cache (likely due to an error)
* `_IterSymlink`: Created by directory iteration when we walk onto a symlink only the symlink file type is known.
* `_IterNonSymlink`: Created by directory iteration when we walk onto a non-symlink. Both the regular file type and symlink file type are known.
* `_RefreshSymlink` and `_RefreshNonSymlink`: A full cache created by `refresh()`. This case includes dead symlinks.
* `_RefreshSymlinkUnresolved`: A partial cache created by refresh when we fail to resolve the file pointed to by a symlink (likely due to permissions). Symlink attributes are cached, but attributes about the linked entity are not.
As mentioned, this implementation purposefully deviates from the standard. According to some readings of the specification, and the Windows filesystem implementation, the constructors and modifiers which don't pass an `error_code` must throw when the `directory_entry` points to a entity which doesn't exist. or when attribute resolution fails for another reason.
@BillyONeal has proposed a more reasonable set of requirements, where modifiers other than refresh ignore errors. This is the behavior libc++ currently implements, with the expectation some form of the new language will be accepted into the standard.
Some additional semantics which differ from the Windows implementation:
1. `refresh` will not throw when the entry doesn't exist. In this case we can still meet the functions specification, so we don't treat it as an error.
2. We don't clear the path name when a constructor fails via refresh (this will hopefully be changed in the standard as well).
It should be noted that libstdc++'s current implementation has the same behavior as libc++, except for point (2).
If the changes to the specification don't get accepted, we'll be able to make the changes later.
[1] http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2016/p0317r1.html
Reviewers: mclow.lists, gromer, ldionne, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: BillyONeal, christof, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49530
llvm-svn: 337516
* Remove unused type from is_assignable.pass.cpp
* Don't specialize `common_type<::X<float>>` in common_type.pass.cpp, which violates the requirements of [meta.trans.other]/5
llvm-svn: 336618
When built against the old libc++ version the test was causing linker error
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"std::experimental::fundamentals_v1::pmr::new_delete_resource()", referenced from:
void test_evil<WidgetV0, WidgetV0>() in construct_piecewise_pair_evil.pass.cpp.o
void test_evil<WidgetV0, WidgetV1>() in construct_piecewise_pair_evil.pass.cpp.o
void test_evil<WidgetV0, WidgetV2>() in construct_piecewise_pair_evil.pass.cpp.o
void test_evil<WidgetV0, WidgetV3>() in construct_piecewise_pair_evil.pass.cpp.o
void test_evil<WidgetV1, WidgetV0>() in construct_piecewise_pair_evil.pass.cpp.o
void test_evil<WidgetV1, WidgetV1>() in construct_piecewise_pair_evil.pass.cpp.o
void test_evil<WidgetV1, WidgetV2>() in construct_piecewise_pair_evil.pass.cpp.o
...
llvm-svn: 334431
C++2a[container.requirements.general]p8 states that when move constructing
a container, the allocator is move constructed. Vector previously copy
constructed these allocators. This patch fixes that bug.
Additionally it cleans up some unnecessary allocator conversions
when copy constructing containers. Libc++ uses
__internal_allocator_traits::select_on_copy_construction to select
the correct allocator during copy construction, but it unnecessarily
converted the resulting allocator to the user specified allocator
type and back. After this patch list and forward_list no longer
do that.
Technically we're supposed to be using allocator_traits<allocator_type>::select_on_copy_construction,
but that should seemingly be addressed as a separate patch, if at all.
llvm-svn: 334053
Summary:
The filesystem test was confused about access versus write / modification time. The spec says:
file_time_type last_write_time(const path& p, error_code& ec) noexcept;
Returns: The time of last data modification of p, determined as if by the value of the POSIX stat structure member st_mtime obtained as if by POSIX stat(). The signature with argument ec returns file_time_type::min() if an error occurs.
The test was looking at st_atime, not st_mtime, when comparing the result from last_write_time. That was probably due to using a pair instead of naming things nicely or using types. I opted to rename things so it's clearer.
This used to cause test bot failures.
<rdar://problem/40648859>
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, aemerson
Subscribers: christof, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47557
llvm-svn: 333723
Patch from Arthur O'Dwyer.
In the TS, `uses_allocator` construction for `pair` tried to use an allocator
type of `memory_resource*`, which is incorrect because `memory_resource*` is
not an allocator type. LWG 2969 fixed it to use `polymorphic_allocator` as the
allocator type instead.
https://wg21.link/lwg2969
(D47090 included this in `<memory_resource>`; at Eric's request, I've split
this out into its own patch applied to the existing
`<experimental/memory_resource>` instead.)
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D47109
llvm-svn: 333384
That's r333325, as well as follow-up "Fix GCC handling of ATOMIC_VAR_INIT"
r333327.
Marshall asked to revert:
Let's have a discussion about how to implement this so that it is more friendly
to people with installed code bases. We've had *extremely* loud responses to
unilaterally adding warnings - especially ones that can't be easily disabled -
to the libc++ code base in the past.
llvm-svn: 333351
r333325 from D47225 added warning checks, and the test was written to be C++11 correct by using ATOMIC_VAR_INIT (note that the committee fixed that recently...). It seems like GCC can't handle ATOMIC_VAR_INIT well because it generates 'type 'std::atomic<int>' cannot be initialized with an initializer list' on bot libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-cxx03. Drop the ATOMIC_VAR_INITs since they weren't required to test the diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 333327
Summary:
The atomic non-member functions accept pointers to std::atomic / std::atomic_flag as well as to the non-atomic value. These are all dereferenced unconditionally when lowered, and therefore will fault if null. It's a tiny gotcha for new users, especially when they pass in NULL as expected value (instead of passing a pointer to a NULL value). We can therefore use the nonnull attribute to denote that:
- A warning should be generated if the argument is null
- It is undefined behavior if the argument is null (because a dereference will segfault)
This patch adds support for this attribute for clang and GCC, and sticks to the subset of the syntax both supports. In particular, work around this GCC oddity:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=60625
The attributes are documented:
- https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.0.0/gcc/Function-Attributes.html
- https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#nullability-attributes
I'm authoring a companion clang patch for the __c11_* and __atomic_* builtins, which currently only warn on a subset of the pointer parameters.
In all cases the check needs to be explicit and not use the empty nonnull list, because some of the overloads are for atomic<T*> and the values themselves are allowed to be null.
<rdar://problem/18473124>
Reviewers: arphaman, EricWF
Subscribers: aheejin, christof, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47225
llvm-svn: 333325
Checking for complete types is really rather tricky when you consider
the amount of specializations required to check a function type. This
specifically caused PR37407 where we incorrectly diagnosed
noexcept function types as incomplete (but there were plenty of other
cases that would cause this).
This patch removes the complete type checking for now. I'm going
to look into adding a clang builtin to correctly do this for us.
llvm-svn: 332040
Atomics in C and C++ are incompatible at the moment and mixing the
headers can result in confusing error messages.
Emit an error explicitly telling about the incompatibility. Introduce
the macro `__ALLOW_STDC_ATOMICS_IN_CXX__` that allows to choose in C++
between C atomics and C++ atomics.
rdar://problem/27435938
Reviewers: rsmith, EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: jkorous-apple, christof, bumblebritches57, JonChesterfield, smeenai, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45470
llvm-svn: 331379
When using an old version of glibc, a ::isinf(double) and ::isnan(double)
function is provided, rather than just the macro required by C and C++.
Displace this function using _LIBCPP_PREFERRED_OVERLOAD where possible.
The only remaining case where we should get the wrong return type is now
glibc + libc++ + a non-clang compiler.
llvm-svn: 331241
seekoff.pass.cpp:
libc++'s tests are asserting things about the buffer passed to pubsetbuf. [filebuf.virtuals]/12 says that what the filebuf does with the buffer you give it is completely implementation defined. The MSVC++ implementation takes that buffer and hands it off to the CRT (by calling ::setvbuf) and the CRT doesn't necessarily follow the pattern this test wants.
This change simply makes asserts against the buffer's contents use LIBCPP_ASSERT instead of assert.
pbackfail.pass.cpp:
libc++'s tests are asserting about what characters will and will not be available in the putback area. [filebuf.virtuals]/9 says "The function can alter the number of putback positions available as a result of any call." This change LIBCPP_ASSERTS libc++'s behavior, but checks invariants of the putback area independently.
llvm-svn: 330999
Be defensive against a reentrant std::function::operator=(nullptr_t), in case
the held function object has a non-trivial destructor. Destroying the function
object in-place can lead to the destructor being called twice.
Patch by Duncan P. N. Exon Smith. C++03 support by Volodymyr Sapsai.
rdar://problem/32836603
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits, arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34331
llvm-svn: 330885
These io_error asserts that std::errc::is_a_directory has message "Is a directory". On MSVC++ it reports "is a directory" (with a lowercase I). That doesn't matter for the ios_failure component being tested, so just implement in terms of system_category().message().
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D45715
llvm-svn: 330791
There are 3 changes:
* Renamed genertor.pass.cpp to generator.pass.cpp
* Removed nothing_to_do.pass.cpp
* Mark GCC 4.9 as UNSUPPORTED for the test files that have negative
narrowing conversion SFINAE test (see GCC PR63723).
llvm-svn: 330655
Summary:
The patch includes all declarations, and also implements the following features:
* ABI.
* narrowing-conversion related SFIANE, including simd<> ctors and (static_)simd_cast.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: lichray, sanjoy, MaskRay, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41148
llvm-svn: 330627
This test code triggers the MSVC warning:
"unary minus operator applied to unsigned type, result still unsigned"
Although it would be possible to change the test code to avoid
this warning, I have chosen to simply silence it.
Fixes D45594.
llvm-svn: 329976
Replace unary_function inheritance (which was never required,
even in C++98) with argument_type and result_type typedefs.
This increases portability, as unary_function was removed in C++17
and MSVC has implemented that removal.
Fixes D45596.
llvm-svn: 329974
MSVC emits "warning C4244: 'initializing': conversion from 'int'
to 'short', possible loss of data" when it sees pair<Whatever, short>
constructed from (whatever, 4), because int is being truncated to
short within pair's constructor. (The compiler doesn't take into
account the fact that 4 is a literal at the callsite; it generates
this warning when the constructor is instantiated, because it might
be called with a runtime-valued int that would actually truncate.)
Instead of static_cast<short>, we can simply change short to int
in these tests, without affecting the pair operations that they're
trying to test: move assignment, convert copy construction, and
convert move construction.
Fixes D45016.
llvm-svn: 329973
Patch from Joe Loser.
Several unit tests meaning to test the behavior of lvalue insertion incorrectly
pass rvalues. Fixes bug PR # 27394
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D44411
llvm-svn: 329541
Summary:
D44883 extends -Wself-assign to also work on C++ classes.
These new warnings pop up in the test suite, so they have to be silenced.
Please refer to the D45082 for disscussion on whether this is the right way to solve this.
Testing: `ninja check-libcxx check-libcxxabi` in stage-2 build.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: Quuxplusone, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45128
llvm-svn: 329490
this patch adds the <compare> header and implements all of it
except for [comp.alg].
As I understand it, the header is needed by the compiler in
when implementing the semantics of operator<=>. For that reason
I feel it's important to land this header early, despite
all compilers lacking support.
llvm-svn: 329460
This patch does some housekeeping for the new <version> header.
It adds it to the module.modulemap, and the double_include.sh.cpp test.
Additionally it corrects the // UNSUPPORTED options for the libc++
specific test. The header needs to compile under C++03 to support
modules, and it should compile under all available compilers.
llvm-svn: 329144
GLIBC 2.27 changed the locale data for fr_FR and ru_RU. In particular
they change the decimal and thousands separators used. This patch
makes the locale tests tolerate the updated locales.
llvm-svn: 329143
This patch implements P0430R2, who's largest change is adding the path::format
enumeration for supporting path format conversions in path constructors.
However, since libc++'s filesystem only really supports POSIX like systems,
there are no real changes needed. This patch simply adds the format enum
and then ignores it when it's passed to constructors.
llvm-svn: 329031
This is a fairly large patch that implements all of the filesystem NB comments
and the relative paths changes (ex. adding weakly_canonical). These issues
and papers are all interrelated so their implementation couldn't be split up
nicely.
This patch upgrades <experimental/filesystem> to match the C++17 spec and not
the published experimental TS spec. Some of the changes in this patch are both
API and ABI breaking, however libc++ makes no guarantee about stability for
experimental implementations.
The major changes in this patch are:
* Implement NB comments for filesystem (P0492R2), including:
* Implement `perm_options` enum as part of NB comments, and update the
`permissions` function to match.
* Implement changes to `remove_filename` and `replace_filename`
* Implement changes to `path::stem()` and `path::extension()` which support
splitting examples like `.profile`.
* Change path iteration to return an empty path instead of '.' for trailing
separators.
* Change `operator/=` to handle absolute paths on the RHS.
* Change `absolute` to no longer accept a current path argument.
* Implement relative paths according to NB comments (P0219r1)
* Combine `path.cpp` and `operations.cpp` since some path functions require
access to the operations internals, and some fs operations require access
to the path parser.
llvm-svn: 329028
Libc++ implements the pair& operator=(pair<U, V>) assignment operator
using a single template that handles assignment from all tuple-like types.
This patch moves the test for that to the libcxx test directory since
it's non-standard. It also adds additional tests to the std/.../pair
directory to test the standard behavior this template implements.
llvm-svn: 328758
This patch corrects num_get for unsigned types to support strings
with a leading `-` character. According to the standard the
number should be parsed as an unsigned integer and then
negated.
llvm-svn: 328751
The NB comments for filesystem changed permissions and added
a new enum `perm_options` which control how the permissions
are applied.
This implements than NB resolution
llvm-svn: 328476
As I move towards implementing std::filesystem, there is a need to
make the existing tests run against both the std and experimental versions.
Additionally, it's helpful to allow running the tests against other
implementations of filesystem.
This patch converts the test to easily target either. First, it
adds a filesystem_include.hpp header which is soley responsible
for selecting and including the correct implementation. Second,
it converts existing tests to use this header instead of including
filesystem directly.
llvm-svn: 328475
Some debian libc++ bots started having failures in the locale
tests due to what I assume is a change in the locale data for fr_FR
in glibc.
This change prints the actual value from the test to help debugging.
It should be reverted once the bots cycle.
llvm-svn: 328268
This fixes a couple of tests which produced a warning that a 'throw'
occurred in a noexcept function (by way of _LIBCPP_ASSERT). It does
so by hiding the 'throw' across an opaque function boundary.
This fix isn't ideal, since we still have _LIBCPP_ASSERT's in functions
marked noexcept -- and this problem should be addressed in the future.
However, throwing _LIBCPP_ASSERT is really only meant to allow testing
of the assertions, and is not yet ready for general use.
llvm-svn: 328265
This patch works around variant test failures which are new to
GCC 8. GCC 8 either doesn't perform SFINAE in lexical order, or
it doesn't halt after encountering the first failure. This
causes hard error to occur instead of substitution failure.
See gcc.gnu.org/PR78489
llvm-svn: 328261
The new/delete tests, in particular those which test replacement
functions, often fail when the optimizer is enabled because the
calls to new/delete may be optimized away, regardless of their side-effects.
This patch converts the tests to use DoNotOptimize in order to prevent
the elision.
llvm-svn: 328245
This patch fixes std::allocator, and more specifically, all users
of __libcpp_allocate and __libcpp_deallocate, to support over-aligned
types.
__libcpp_allocate/deallocate now take an alignment parameter, and when
the specified alignment is greater than that supported by malloc/new,
the aligned version of operator new is called (assuming it's available).
When aligned new isn't available, the old behavior has been kept, and the
alignment parameter is ignored.
This patch depends on recent changes to __builtin_operator_new/delete which
allow them to be used to call any regular new/delete operator. By using
__builtin_operator_new/delete when possible, the new/delete erasure optimization
is maintained.
llvm-svn: 328180
After two failed attempts last week to make this work I am
going back to a known good method of making this test pass on
macOS...adding the current apple-clang version to the
UNSUPPORTED list.
During a previous patch review (https://reviews.llvm.org/D44103)
it was suggested to just XFAIL libcpp-no-deduction-guides
as was done to iter_alloc_deduction.pass.cpp. However
this caused a an unexpected pass on:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/libcxx-libcxxabi-x86_64-linux-ubuntu-gcc-tot-latest-std/builds/214
I then attempted to just mark libcpp-no-deduction-guides
as UNSUPPORTED, however this caused an additional bot
failure. So I reverted everything (https://reviews.llvm.org/rCXX327191).
To solve this and get work unblocked I am adding
apple-clang-9 to the original UNSUPPORTED list.
llvm-svn: 327304
Summary: Refactor the previous version method of marking each apple-clang version as UNSUPPORTED and just XFAIL'ing the libcpp-no-deduction-guides instead. This brings this test inline with the same style as iter_alloc_deduction.pass.cpp
Reviewers: EricWF, dexonsmith
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: EricWF, vsapsai, vsk, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44103
llvm-svn: 327178
shrink_to_fit() ends up doing a lot work to get information that we
already know since we just called clear(). This change seems concise
enough to be worth the couple extra lines and my benchmarks show that it
is indeed a pretty decent win. It looks like the same thing is going on
twice in __copy_assign_alloc(), but I didn't want to go overboard since
this is my first contribution to llvm/libc++.
Patch by Timothy VanSlyke!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41976
llvm-svn: 327064
APFS minimum supported file write time is -2^63 nanoseconds, which doesn't go
as far as `file_time_type::min()` that is equal to -2^63 microseconds on macOS.
This change doesn't affect filesystems that support `file_time_type` range only
for in-memory file time representation but not for on-disk representation. Such
filesystems are considered as `SupportsMinTime`.
rdar://problem/35865151
Reviewers: EricWF, Hahnfeld
Subscribers: jkorous-apple, mclow.lists, cfe-commits, christof
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42755
llvm-svn: 326383
test/std/numerics/numeric.ops/exclusive.scan/exclusive_scan.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/numeric.ops/exclusive.scan/exclusive_scan_init_op.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/numeric.ops/inclusive.scan/inclusive_scan.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/numeric.ops/inclusive.scan/inclusive_scan_op.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/numeric.ops/inclusive.scan/inclusive_scan_op_init.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/numeric.ops/transform.exclusive.scan/transform_exclusive_scan_init_bop_uop.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/numeric.ops/transform.inclusive.scan/transform_inclusive_scan_bop_uop.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/numeric.ops/transform.inclusive.scan/transform_inclusive_scan_bop_uop_init.pass.cpp
Fix MSVC x64 truncation warnings.
warning C4267: conversion from 'size_t' to 'int', possible loss of data
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.modifiers/string_append/push_back.pass.cpp
Fix MSVC uninitialized memory warning.
warning C6001: Using uninitialized memory 'vl'.
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.tuple/tuple.cnstr/PR20855_tuple_ref_binding_diagnostics.pass.cpp
Include <cassert> for the assert() macro.
Fixes D43273.
llvm-svn: 326120
Summary:
These flags can be specified using the CMake variables
LIBCXX_TEST_LINKER_FLAGS and LIBCXX_TEST_COMPILER_FLAGS.
When building the tests for CHERI I need to pass additional
flags (such as -mabi=n64 or -mabi=purecap) to the compiler
for our test configurations
Reviewers: EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42139
llvm-svn: 325914
Summary:
Currently std::asinh and std::acosh use std::pow to compute x^2. This
results in a significant error when computing e.g. asinh(i) or
acosh(-1).
This patch expresses x^2 directly via x.real() and x.imag(), like it
is done in libstdc++/glibc, and adds tests that checks the accuracy.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41629
llvm-svn: 325510
Patch from ngolovliov@gmail.com
Reviewed as: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42344
As described in llvm.org/PR30959, the current
implementation of std::{map, key}::{count, equal_range} in libcxx is
non-conforming. Quoting the C++14 standard [associative.reqmts]p3
> The phrase “equivalence of keys” means the equivalence relation imposed by
> the comparison and not the operator== on keys. That is, two keys k1 and k2 are
> considered to be equivalent if for the comparison object comp,
> comp(k1, k2) == false && comp(k2, k1) == false.
In the same section, the requirements table states the following:
> a.equal_range(k) equivalent to make_pair(a.lower_bound(k), a.upper_bound(k))
> a.count(k) returns the number of elements with key equivalent to k
The behaviour of libstdc++ seems to conform to the standard here.
llvm-svn: 324799
Summary:
Currently libc++ implements some operations on valarray by using the
resize method. This method has a parameter with a default value.
Because of this, valarray may spuriously construct and destruct
objects of valarray's element type.
This patch fixes this issue and adds corresponding test cases.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: rogfer01, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41992
llvm-svn: 324596
An array T[1] isn't necessarily the same say when it's
a member of a struct. This patch addresses that problem and corrects
the tests to deal with it.
llvm-svn: 324545
Summary:
This patch fixes llvm.org/PR35491 and LWG2157 (https://cplusplus.github.io/LWG/issue2157)
The fix attempts to maintain ABI compatibility by replacing the array with a instance of `aligned_storage`.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: lichray, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41223
llvm-svn: 324526
Revert "Fix initialization of array<const T, 0> with GCC."
Revert "Make array<const T, 0> non-CopyAssignable and make swap and fill ill-formed."
This reverts commit r324182, r324185, and r324194 which were causing issues with zero-length std::arrays.
llvm-svn: 324309
This patch removes the noexcept declaration from filesystem
operations which require creating temporary paths or
creating a directory iterator. Either of these operations
can throw.
llvm-svn: 324192
Because path can be constructed from a ton of different types, including string
and wide strings, this caused it's streaming operators to suck up all sorts
of silly types via silly conversions. For example:
using namespace std::experimental::filesystem::v1;
std::wstring w(L"wide");
std::cout << w; // converts to path.
This patch tentatively adopts the resolution to LWG2989 and fixes the issue
by making the streaming operators friends of path.
llvm-svn: 324189
The standard isn't exactly clear how std::array should handle zero-sized arrays
with const element types. In particular W.R.T. copy assignment, swap, and fill.
This patch takes the position that those operations should be ill-formed,
and makes changes to libc++ to make it so.
This follows up on commit r324182.
llvm-svn: 324185
Summary:
This patch fixes llvm.org/PR35491 and LWG2157 (https://cplusplus.github.io/LWG/issue2157)
The fix attempts to maintain ABI compatibility by replacing the array with a instance of `aligned_storage`.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: lichray, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41223
llvm-svn: 324182
When Clang encounters an already invalid class declaration, it can
emit incorrect diagnostics about the exception specification on
some of its members. This patch temporarily works around that
incorrect diagnostic.
The clang bug was introduced in r324062.
llvm-svn: 324164
Clang previously reported an empty union as having a unique object
representation. This was incorrect and was fixed in a recent Clang commit.
This patch fixes the libc++ tests.
llvm-svn: 324153
According to [1], forms 2 and 4 of std::is_permutation should use the passed in
binary predicate to compare elements. operator== should only be used for forms
1 and 3 which do not take a binary predicate.
This CL fixes forms 2 and 4 which relied on operator== for some comparisons.
[1] http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/algorithm/is_permutation
Patch by Thomas Anderson!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42518
llvm-svn: 323563
Code on Windows expects to be able to do:
#define _USE_MATH_DEFINES
#include <math.h>
and receive the definitions of mathematical constants, even if <math.h>
has previously been included. To support this scenario, re-include
<math.h> every time the wrapper header is included.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42403
llvm-svn: 323490
There was a bug in the implementation of splice where the container
sizes were updated before decrementing one of the iterators. Afterwards,
the result of decrementing the iterator was flagged as UB by the debug
implementation because the container was reported to be empty.
This patch fixes that bug by delaying the updating of the container
sizes until after the iterators have been correctly constructed.
llvm-svn: 323390
Summary:
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=20855
Libc++ goes out of it's way to diagnose `std::tuple` constructions which are UB due to lifetime bugs caused by reference creation. For example:
```
// The 'const std::string&' is created *inside* the tuple constructor, and its lifetime is over before the end of the constructor call.
std::tuple<int, const std::string&> t(std::make_tuple(42, "abc"));
```
However, we are over-aggressive and we incorrectly diagnose cases such as:
```
void foo(std::tuple<int const&, int const&> const&);
foo(std::make_tuple(42, 42));
```
This patch fixes the incorrectly diagnosed cases, as well as converting the diagnostic to use the newly added Clang trait `__reference_binds_to_temporary`. The new trait allows us to diagnose cases we previously couldn't such as:
```
std::tuple<int, const std::string&> t(42, "abc");
```
Reviewers: rsmith, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41977
llvm-svn: 323380
Summary:
Currently when a regular expression contains an invalid character
class name std::regex constructors throw an std::regex_error with
std::regex_constants::error_brack code.
This patch changes the code to std::regex_constants::error_ctype and
adds a test.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42291
llvm-svn: 323322
This is an MSVC standard library extension. It seems like a reasonable
enough extension to me because wchar_t* is the native format for
filenames on that platform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42225
llvm-svn: 323170
This patch fixes almost all currently failing tests when
using GCC ToT.
The specific changes are:
(A) Workaround gcc.gnu.org/PR83921 which rejects variables w/o initializers
in constexpr contexts -- even when the variable is an empty class. This
bug has been worked around at all callsites by adding an initializer.
Additionally a new test, constexpr_init.pass.cpp, has been added to
test that Clang doesn't suffer from these bugs.
(B) Fix streambuf.assign/swap.pass.cpp. This test was never actually
calling the swap method as intended. In fact, the swap function it
intended to call was ill-formed when instantiated. GCC diagnosed
this ill-formedness w/o needing an instantiation.
(C) size_delete11.pass.cpp was fixed by adding c++2a to the list of
unsupported dialects.
llvm-svn: 322810
Previously .fail.cpp tests for nodiscard were run with -Wunused-result
being a warning, not an error, when the compiler didn't support -verify.
When -verify isn't enabled this change judiciously adds -Werror=unused-result
when to only the failure tests containing the // expected-error string for nodiscard.
As a drive-by change, this patch also adds a missing // UNSUPPORTED: c++2a to
a test which was only supposed to run in C++ <= 11.
llvm-svn: 322776
It covers the cases when the sentry object returns false and when an exception
was thrown. Corresponding standard paragraph is C++14 [istream.unformatted]p9:
[...] In any case, if n is greater than zero it then stores a null
character into the next successive location of the array.
rdar://problem/35566567
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40677
llvm-svn: 322326
test/support/msvc_stdlib_force_include.hpp
When testing MSVC's STL with C1XX, simulate a couple more compiler feature-test macros.
When testing MSVC's STL, simulate a few library feature-test macros.
test/std/atomics/atomics.lockfree/isalwayslockfree.pass.cpp
The vector_size attribute is a non-Standard extension that's supported by Clang and GCC,
but not C1XX. Therefore, guard this with `__has_attribute(vector_size)`.
Additionally, while these tests pass when MSVC's STL is compiled with Clang,
I don't consider this to be a supported scenario for our library,
so also guard this with defined(_LIBCPP_VERSION).
test/std/utilities/function.objects/func.not_fn/not_fn.pass.cpp
N4713 23.14.10 [func.not_fn]/1 depicts only `call_wrapper(call_wrapper&&) = default;`
and `call_wrapper(const call_wrapper&) = default;`. According to
15.8.2 [class.copy.assign]/2 and /4, this makes call_wrapper non-assignable.
Therefore, guard the assignability tests as libc++ specific.
Add a (void) cast to tolerate not_fn() being marked as nodiscard.
Fixes D41213.
llvm-svn: 322144
Summary:
After rL319736 for D28253 (which fixes PR28929), gcc cannot compile `<memory>` anymore in pre-C+11 modes, complaining:
```
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:648:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory: In static member function 'static std::__1::shared_ptr<_Tp> std::__1::shared_ptr<_Tp>::make_shared(_A0&, _A1&, _A2&)':
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory:4365:5: error: wrong number of template arguments (4, should be at least 1)
static_assert((is_constructible<_Tp, _A0, _A1, _A2>::value), "Can't construct object in make_shared" );
^
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:649:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/type_traits:3198:29: note: provided for 'template<class _Tp, class _A0, class _A1> struct std::__1::is_constructible'
struct _LIBCPP_TEMPLATE_VIS is_constructible
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:648:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory:4365:5: error: template argument 1 is invalid
static_assert((is_constructible<_Tp, _A0, _A1, _A2>::value), "Can't construct object in make_shared" );
^
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory: In static member function 'static std::__1::shared_ptr<_Tp> std::__1::shared_ptr<_Tp>::allocate_shared(const _Alloc&, _A0&, _A1&, _A2&)':
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory:4444:5: error: wrong number of template arguments (4, should be at least 1)
static_assert((is_constructible<_Tp, _A0, _A1, _A2>::value), "Can't construct object in allocate_shared" );
^
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:649:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/type_traits:3198:29: note: provided for 'template<class _Tp, class _A0, class _A1> struct std::__1::is_constructible'
struct _LIBCPP_TEMPLATE_VIS is_constructible
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:648:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory:4444:5: error: template argument 1 is invalid
static_assert((is_constructible<_Tp, _A0, _A1, _A2>::value), "Can't construct object in allocate_shared" );
^
```
This is also reported in https://bugs.freebsd.org/224946 (FreeBSD is apparently one of the very few projects that regularly builds programs against libc++ with gcc).
The reason is that the static assertions are invoking `is_constructible` with three arguments, while gcc does not have the built-in `is_constructible` feature, and the pre-C++11 `is_constructible` wrappers in `<type_traits>` only provide up to two arguments.
I have added additional wrappers for three arguments, modified the `is_constructible` entry point to take three arguments instead, and added a simple test to is_constructible.pass.cpp.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: krytarowski, cfe-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41805
llvm-svn: 321963
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D41748
* These tests use function objects from functional, back_inserter from iterator, and equal from algorithm, so add those headers.
* The use of iota targeting vector<unsigned char> with an int parameter triggers warnings on MSVC++ assigning an into a unsigned char&; so change the parameter to unsigned char with a static_cast.
* Avoid naming unary_function in identity here as that is removed in '17. (This also fixes naming _VSTD, _NOEXCEPT_, and other libcxx-isms)
* Change the predicate in the transform tests to add_ten so that problems with multiple application are caught.
llvm-svn: 321922
* _VSTD should be std.
* <utility> is needed for forward.
* unary_function is no longer standard (and unnecessary for this, a C++17-only test)
llvm-svn: 321847
As a result of this change, the basic_stringbuf constructor that
takes a mode ends up leaving __hm_ set to 0, causing the comparison
"__hm_ - __str_.data() < __noff" in seekoff() to succeed, which caused
the function to incorrectly return -1. The fix is to account for the
possibility of __hm_ being 0 when computing the distance from __hm_
to the start of the string.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41319
llvm-svn: 321124
Summary:
[libcxx] Fix basic_stringbuf constructor
The C++ Standard [stringbuf.cons]p1 defines the effects of the basic_stringbuf
constructor that takes ios_base::openmode as follows:
Effects: Constructs an object of class basic_stringbuf, initializing the
base class with basic_streambuf(), and initializing mode with which.
Postconditions: str() == "".
The default constructor of basic_streambuf shall initialize all its
pointer member objects to null pointers [streambuf.cons]p1.
Currently libc++ calls "str(string_type());" in the aforementioned constructor
setting basic_streambuf's pointers to a non-null value.
This patch removes the call (note that the postcondition str() == ""
remains valid because __str_ is default-initialized) and adds a test checking
that the basic_streambuf's pointers are null after construction.
Thanks Mikhail Maltsev for the patch.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40707
llvm-svn: 320604
benchmarks/util_smartptr.bench.cpp
Change CRLF to LF.
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.monetary/locale.money.get/locale.money.get.members/get_long_double_fr_FR.pass.cpp
Consistently comment "\u20ac" as EURO SIGN, its Unicode name, instead of the actual Unicode character.
test/std/utilities/allocator.adaptor/allocator.adaptor.members/construct_type.pass.cpp
Avoid non-ASCII dash.
Fixes D40991.
llvm-svn: 320536
test/std/algorithms/alg.modifying.operations/alg.generate/generate_n.pass.cpp
Silence MSVC warning C4244. This is expected when passing
floating-point values for size.
test/std/utilities/template.bitset/bitset.members/to_ullong.pass.cpp
test/std/utilities/template.bitset/bitset.members/to_ulong.pass.cpp
Avoid MSVC "warning C4293: '<<': shift count negative or too big,
undefined behavior". MSVC sees (1ULL << N) and warns - being guarded
by const bool canFit is insufficient. A small change to the code
avoids the warning without the need for a pragma.
Remove a spurious printf() declaration from to_ullong.pass.cpp.
Change ULL to UL in to_ulong.pass.cpp. The ULL suffix was
probably copy-pasted.
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.general/ignore.pass.cpp
Use LIBCPP_STATIC_ASSERT for consistency with other files.
test/support/container_test_types.h
Fix a null pointer dereference, found by MSVC /analyze
warning C6011 "Dereferencing NULL pointer 'm_expected_args'."
Fixes D41030.
llvm-svn: 320535
Summary:
Introduce a new form of `result_of` without function type encoding.
Rename and split `is_callable/is_nothrow_callable` into `is_invocable/is_nothrow_invocable/is_invocable_r/is_nothrow_invocable_r` (and associated types accordingly)
Change function type encoding of previous `is_callable/is_nothrow_callable` traits to conventional template type parameter lists.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, bebuch
Reviewed By: EricWF, bebuch
Subscribers: lichray, bebuch, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38831
llvm-svn: 320509
Currently libc++ defines operator== and operator!= as friend functions in the
definition of the istream_iterator class template. Such definition has a subtle
difference from an out-of-line definition required by the C++ Standard: these
functions can only be found by argument-dependent lookup, but not by qualified
lookup.
This patch changes the definition, so that it conforms to the C++ Standard and
adds a check involving qualified lookup to the test suite.
Patch contributed by Mikhail Maltsev.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40415
llvm-svn: 320363
AddLLVM is needed for several functions that are used in tests and
as such needs to be included from the right context which previously
wasn't the case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40280
llvm-svn: 319515
r318862 added a fix for 0-termination input array in case of an error. Previous
libcxx versions don't have the fix and corresponding tests should be failing.
llvm-svn: 318863
It covers the cases when the sentry object returns false and when an exception
was thrown. Corresponding standard paragraph is C++14 [istream.unformatted]p21:
In any case, if n is greater than zero, it then stores a null character
(using charT()) into the next successive location of the array.
Patch by Reimar Döffinger.
llvm-svn: 318862
In a17cd7c641c34b6c4bd4845a4d4fb590cb6c238c Marshall added assert(true) to the vector<bool>::size tests, which break on C1XX:
D:\Contest\gl0qojfu.5pe\src\qa\vc\libs\libcxx\upstream\test\std\containers\sequences\vector.bool\size.pass.cpp(62): error C2220: warning treated as error - no 'object' file generated
d:\contest\gl0qojfu.5pe\src\qa\vc\libs\libcxx\upstream\test\std\containers\sequences\vector.bool\size.pass.cpp(33) : warning C6326: Potential comparison of a constant with another constant.
d:\contest\gl0qojfu.5pe\src\qa\vc\libs\libcxx\upstream\test\std\containers\sequences\vector.bool\size.pass.cpp(52) : warning C6326: Potential comparison of a constant with another constant.
The corresponding test for vector::size asserts assert(c.size() == 3);, so I changed it to do that here.
llvm-svn: 318812
Summary:
Currently `std::variant` always uses an unsigned int to store the variant index. However this isn't nessesary and causes `std::variant` to be larger than it needs to be in most cases.
This patch changes the index type to be `unsigned char` when possible, and `unsigned short` or `unsigned int` otherwise, depending on the size (Although it's questionable if it's even possible to create a variant with 65535 elements.
Unfortunately this change is an ABI break, and as such is only enabled in ABI v2.
Reviewers: mpark
Reviewed By: mpark
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40210
llvm-svn: 318621
Summary:
In the CHERI clang compiler __output and __input are keywords and therefore
we can't compile libc++ with our compiler.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, theraven
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39537
llvm-svn: 318144
r313500 added a fix for undefined "___cxa_deleted_virtual" symbol.
Previous libcxx versions don't have the fix and corresponding test
should be failing.
rdar://problem/34521053
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, ahatanak
Reviewed By: ahatanak
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39776
llvm-svn: 317734
This patch changes the test suite to attempt and prefer -std=c++17 over
-std=c++1z. It also fixes the REQUIRES and UNSUPPORTED lit markers
to refer to c++17 over c++1z.
llvm-svn: 317610
LWG 3013 points out that the constructors and increment members
of the directory iterators need to allocate, and therefore cannot
be marked noexcept.
It also points out that `is_empty` and `copy` likely need to allocate
as well, and as such can also not be noexcept.
This patch speculatively implements the resolution removing noexcept,
because libc++ does indeed have the possibility of throwing on allocation
failure.
llvm-svn: 316941
The guts of the increment method for recursive_directory_iterator
was failing to pass an error code object to calls to status/symlink_status,
which can throw under certain conditions.
This patch fixes the issues by correctly propagating the error codes.
However the noexcept still needs to be removed from the signature, as
mentioned in LWG 3014, but that change will be made in a separate commit.
llvm-svn: 316939
Summary:
The constructors `vector(Iter, Iter, Alloc = Alloc{})` and `assign(Iter, Iter)` don't correctly perform EmplaceConstruction from the result of dereferencing the iterator. This results in them performing an additional and unneeded copy.
This patch addresses the issue by correctly using `emplace_back` in C++11 and newer.
There are also some bugs in our `insert` implementation, but those will be handled separately.
@mclow.lists We should probably merge this into 5.1, agreed?
Reviewers: mclow.lists, dlj, EricWF
Reviewed By: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits, mclow.lists
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38757
llvm-svn: 315994
The vcruntime headers are hairy and clash with both libc++ headers
themselves and other libraries. libc++ normally deals with the clashes
by deferring to the vcruntime headers and silencing its own definitions,
but for clients which don't want to depend on vcruntime headers, it's
desirable to support the opposite, i.e. have libc++ provide its own
definitions.
Certain operator new/delete replacement scenarios are not currently
supported in this mode, which requires some tests to be marked XFAIL.
The added documentation has more details.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38522
llvm-svn: 315234
This warning "structure was padded due to alignment specifier" says
that the compiler is going to do exactly what you asked it to do.
It's triggered by the tests for over-aligned dynamic memory allocation.
llvm-svn: 314257
After speaking with the libcxx owners, they agreed that this is
a bug in the bot that needs to be fixed by the bot owners, and
the CMake changes are correct.
llvm-svn: 313643
This reverts commit 4ad71811d45268d81b60f27e3b8b2bcbc23bd7b9.
There is a bot that is checking out libcxx and lit with nothing
else and then running lit.py against the test tree. Since there's
no LLVM source tree, there's no LLVM CMake. CMake actually
reports this as a warning saying unsupported libcxx configuration,
but I guess someone is depending on it anyway.
llvm-svn: 313607
Patch from Eddie Elizondo. Reviewed as D37830 (https://reviews.llvm.org/D37830).
On MacOSX the following program:
struct S { virtual void f() = delete; };
int main() { new S; }
Fails with the following error:
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"___cxa_deleted_virtual"
This adds a fix to export the needed symbols.
Test:
> lit -sv test/libcxx/language.support/cxa_deleted_virtual.pass.cpp
> Testing Time: 0.21s
> Expected Passes : 1
llvm-svn: 313500
Clang recently changed the way it outputs static assert diagnostics.
This patch fixes libc++'s -verify tests so they tolerate both the old
and new message format.
llvm-svn: 313499
There were a number of cases where __double_underscore functions,
for example __has_construct_test, were called without being qualified,
causing ADL to occur. This patch qualifies those calls to avoid this
problem.
Thanks to David L. Jones for point out the issue initially.
llvm-svn: 313324
This patch fixes llvm.org/PR34298. Previously libc++ incorrectly evaluated
the __invokable trait via the converting constructor `function(Tp)` [with Tp = std::function]
whenever the copy constructor or copy assignment operator
was required. This patch further constrains that constructor to short
circut before evaluating the troublesome SFINAE when `Tp` matches
std::function.
The original patch is from Alex Lorenz.
llvm-svn: 312892
This reverts commit r312890 because the test case fails to compile for
older versions of Clang that reject initializing a const object without
a user defined constructor.
Since this patch should go into 5.0.1, I want to keep it an atomic change,
and will re-commit it with a fixed test case.
llvm-svn: 312891
This patch fixes llvm.org/PR34298. Previously libc++ incorrectly evaluated
the __invokable trait via the converting constructor `function(Tp)` [with Tp = std::function]
whenever the copy constructor or copy assignment operator
was required. This patch further constrains that constructor to short
circut before evaluating the troublesome SFINAE when `Tp` matches
std::function.
The original patch is from Alex Lorenz.
llvm-svn: 312890
* Update specification text from N4387
* Delete not_brace_initializable.fail.cpp: it's redundant with nullopt_t.fail.cpp
* is_empty<T> implies is_class<T>
* is_literal is deprecated; directly verify that we can create a nullopt_t in a constexpr context
Differential Revision: D37024
llvm-svn: 312256
test/std/containers/Emplaceable.h
test/std/containers/NotConstructible.h
test/support/counting_predicates.hpp
Replace unary_function/binary_function inheritance with typedefs.
test/std/depr/depr.function.objects/depr.base/binary_function.pass.cpp
test/std/depr/depr.function.objects/depr.base/unary_function.pass.cpp
test/std/utilities/function.objects/func.require/binary_function.pass.cpp
test/std/utilities/function.objects/func.require/unary_function.pass.cpp
Mark these tests as requiring 98/03/11/14 because 17 removed unary_function/binary_function.
test/std/thread/futures/futures.task/futures.task.members/ctor_func_alloc.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/futures/futures.task/futures.task.nonmembers/uses_allocator.pass.cpp
Mark these tests as requiring 11/14 because 17 removed packaged_task allocator support.
test/std/utilities/function.objects/func.wrap/func.wrap.func/derive_from.pass.cpp
This test doesn't need to be skipped in C++17 mode. Only the construction of
std::function from an allocator needs to be skipped in C++17 mode.
test/std/utilities/function.objects/refwrap/refwrap.access/conversion.pass.cpp
test/std/utilities/function.objects/refwrap/refwrap.assign/copy_assign.pass.cpp
test/std/utilities/function.objects/refwrap/refwrap.const/copy_ctor.pass.cpp
test/std/utilities/function.objects/refwrap/refwrap.const/type_ctor.pass.cpp
When testing these reference_wrapper features, unary_function inheritance is totally irrelevant.
test/std/utilities/function.objects/refwrap/weak_result.pass.cpp
Define and use my_unary_function/my_binary_function to test the weak result type machinery
(which is still present in C++17, although deprecated).
test/support/msvc_stdlib_force_include.hpp
Now we can test C++17 strictly, without enabling removed features.
Fixes D36503.
llvm-svn: 311705
This improves readability and (theoretically) improves portability,
as _Ugly names are reserved.
This performs additional de-uglification, so all of these tests
follow the example of iterator.traits/empty.pass.cpp.
llvm-svn: 310761
This makes them consistent (many comments already used uppercase).
The special REQUIRES, UNSUPPORTED, and XFAIL comments are excluded from this change.
llvm-svn: 309468
Creating a function pointer with proper parameters pointing to std::next() or std::prev() should work.
This change moves the invented paramater for enable_if over to the return type to resolve this QoI issue.
Patch by Jason Liu.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34649
llvm-svn: 308932
On Apple the test feature 'sanitizer-new-delete' was incorrectly
getting added to the LIT feature set, which mistakenly caused tests
to be disabled when using UBSAN (the feature is only needed with ASAN/MSAN/TSAN).
llvm-svn: 307518
32-bit powerpc provides a 64 bit time_t type and older ppc64 systems
provide time_t as a floating point type. This caused problems when building
operations.cpp since operations.cpp contained compile time tests for conversions
between time_t and filesystem time type.
When these tests failed they caused the libc++ build to fail as well. This is unfortunate.
This patch moves the tests out of the source file and into the test suite. It also
expands the tests to allow testing of the weird time_t configurations on all platforms.
llvm-svn: 307461
r283051 added some functions to cmath (in namespace std) that have the
same name as functions in math.h (in the global namespace). Clang's
limited support for `-fdelayed-template-parsing` chokes on this. Rename
the ones in `cmath` and their uses in `complex` and the test.
rdar://problem/32848355
llvm-svn: 307357
In order for IDE's like CLion to correctly parse and highlight the tests
it needs to know roughly how to build them. This patch adds a dummy CMake target
for each/all of the .pass.cpp tests in the test suite to solve this problem.
The target is only created when LIBCXX_CONFIGURE_IDE=ON, so it shouldn't affect
most users.
Originally I wasn't sure that this change deserved to live upstream, but it's
quite frustrating to edit libc++ tests using CLion or Visual Studio without it,
in particular the filesystem tests which rely heavily on macros. Even though the change
should have no effect on non-IDE users/configurations I decided to commit it upstream
with the hopes it will benefit somebody other than me.
llvm-svn: 307118
This patch speculatively implements the PR for LWG 2937, which fixes
two issues with equivalent.
(1) It makes equivalent("dne", "exists") an error. Previously only
equivalent("dne", "dne") was an error and the former case was not (it returned false).
Now equivalent reports an error when either input doesn't exist.
(2) It makes equivalent(p1, p2) well-formed when `is_other(p1) && is_other(p2)`.
Previously this was an error, but there is seemingly no reason why it should be on POSIX system.
llvm-svn: 307117
This reverts commit r306310.
r306310 causes clang to reject a call to an aligned allocation or
deallocation function if it is not implemented in the standard library
of the deployment target. This is not the desired behavior when users
have defined their own aligned functions.
rdar://problem/32664169
llvm-svn: 306859
attribute.
This is needed because older versions of libc++ do not have these
operators. If users target an older deployment target and try to compile
programs in which these operators are explicitly called, the compiler
will complain.
The following is the list of minimum deployment targets for the four
OSes:
macosx: 10.13
ios: 11.0
tvos: 11.0
watchos: 4.0
rdar://problem/32664169
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34556
llvm-svn: 306310
Clang and C1XX both complain about mismatched class/struct, but libc++ and MSVC's STL
differ on what they use for tuple_element/tuple_size, so there's no way to win here.
I'm reverting this part of my previous change. In the future, I'll have to suppress
the warning for one compiler or the other.
llvm-svn: 305854
Style/paranoia: 42.1 doesn't have an exact binary representation. Although this doesn't
cause failures, it makes me uncomfortable, so I'm changing it to 42.5.
C1XX rightly warns about unreferenced variables. Adding tests for their values
makes C1XX happy and improves test coverage.
C1XX (somewhat obnoxiously) warns about seeing a struct specialized as a class.
Although the Standard doesn't care, saying struct consistently is better.
(The Standard itself is still inconsistent about whether to depict tuple_element
and tuple_size as structs or classes.)
Fixes D33953.
llvm-svn: 305843
Remarks: This function shall not participate in overload resolution unless
`is_same_v<decay_t<T>, variant>` is false, unless `decay_t<T>` is
neither a specialization of `in_place_type_t` nor a specialization of
`in_place_index_t`, unless `is_constructible_v<Tj, T>` is true, and
unless the expression `FUN(std::forward<T>(t))` (with `FUN` being the
above-mentioned set of imaginary functions) is well formed.
Depends on D34111.
Reviewers: EricWF, K-ballo
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34112
llvm-svn: 305668
C99 at least. C89 still fails due to the use of block comments.
NOTE: Having libc++ on the include path when compiling C is not
recommended or ever really supported. However it happens often
enough that this change is warrented.
llvm-svn: 305539
It seems conceivable that a user would need to get a coroutine handle
having only a const reference to the promise_type, for example from
within a const member function of the promise.
This patch allows that use case. A coroutine_handle<const T> can be used
in essentially the same way a coroutine_handle<T>, ie to start and destroy
the coroutine. The constness of the promise doesn't/shouldn't propagate
to the handle.
llvm-svn: 305536
locale.codecvt.byname/ctor_char.pass.cpp:
This test used to use "en_US" as a plain string instead of using platform_support.
Need to fix this because MS STL expects "en-US" instead.
platform_support.h:
These are the legacy Windows locale names. Should use IETF tags instead.
I've also added en_US, since a test was using that as a locale string as well.
msvc_stdlib_force_include.hpp:
Remove _MSVC_STL_VER. The libraries will directly define _MSVC_STL_VERSION in the future.
Fixes D29351.
llvm-svn: 305000
On Bionic PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER contains the expression "<enum-type> & <integer-type>",
which causes ADL to perform name lookup for operator&. During this lookup Clang decides
that it requires the default member initializer for std::mutex while defining the DMI
for std::mutex::__m_.
If I'm not mistaken this is caused by the explicit noexcept declaration on the defaulted
constructor.
This patch removes the explicit noexcept and instead allows the compiler to declare
the default constructor implicitly noexcept. It also adds a static_assert to ensure
that happens.
Unfortunatly because it's not easy to change the value of _LIBCPP_MUTEX_INITIALIZER
for a single test there is no good way to test this patch.
The Clang behavior causing the trouble here was introduced in r287713, which first
appears in the 4.0 release.
llvm-svn: 304942
Summary:
- Removed the move-constructibe requirement from copy-assignable.
- Updated `__assign_alt` such that we direct initialize if
`_Tp` can be `nothrow`-constructible from `_Arg`, or `_Tp`'s
move construction can throw. Otherwise, construct a temporary and move it.
- Updated the tests to remove the pre-LWG2904 path.
Depends on D32671.
Reviewers: EricWF, CaseyCarter
Reviewed By: EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33965
llvm-svn: 304891
Also: Move constexpr / triviality extension tests into the std tree and make them conditional on _LIBCPP_VERSION / _MSVC_STL_VERSION.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D32671
llvm-svn: 304847
This macro will instruct MSVC's STL to not warn about features that are deprecated in C++17,
as libcxx tests those features and uses them elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 304765
Was VSO#109062. This bug was filed *4 years ago*. I submitted a workaround to enable the scoped_allocator_adaptor tests to pass. Bug fixed a week and a half later. This was either a waste of my time, or I've discovered that libc++ has magical bugfix-inducing powers. My money's on the latter.
llvm-svn: 304730
Summary:
This patch improves how libc++ handles min/max macros within the headers. Previously libc++ would undef them and emit a warning.
This patch changes libc++ to use `#pragma push_macro` to save the macro before undefining it, and `#pragma pop_macro` to restore the macros and the end of the header.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, bcraig, compnerd, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits, krytarowski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33080
llvm-svn: 304357
The shell test versions didn't get all of the flags normal tests
do, specifically warning flags. This patch makes them .pass.cpp tests,
and uses a lit.local.cfg to add -fcoroutines-ts and to make them
UNSUPPORTED when that flag isn't available.
llvm-svn: 304351
from_address requires that the provided pointer refer to the suspended coroutine,
which doesn't have a type, or at least not one knowable by the user. Therefore
every use of `from_address` with a typed pointer is almost certainly a bug.
This behavior is a part of the TS specification, but hopefully it will be
in the future.
llvm-svn: 304172
More tests to come. I think that from_address overload should be deleted
or ill-formed, except for the 'void*' one; The user cannot possibly
have a typed pointer to the coroutine state.
llvm-svn: 304131
This patch adds end-to-end/breathing tests for coroutines
into libc++. The tests aren't specifically to test libc++ requirements
but instead are intented to ensure coroutines are working fine in general.
Although libc++ isn't exactly the most correct place for these tests
to live, there is one major advantage. The libc++ test suite is also
used by MSVC and by adding the tests here it ensures they will be
run against all currently available coroutine implementations.
llvm-svn: 304101
Clang supports coroutines in all dialects; Therefore libc++ should too,
otherwise the Clang extension is unusable.
I'm not convinced extending support to C++03 is a feasible long term
plan, since as the library grows to offer things like generators it
will be come increasingly difficult to limit the implementation to C++03.
However for the time being supporting C++03 isn't a big deal.
llvm-svn: 303963
The tests were previously guarded by #if defined(_LIBCPP_VER) || defined(_MSVC_STL_VER),
which is both incorrect (e.g. _LIBCPP_VERSION) and unneeded. Although the tests are
technically non-standard (yet) they are supported by both libc++ and MSVC's STL.
libstdc++ doesn't regularly use the test suite so I'm not concerned about guarding these
tests for them.
llvm-svn: 303953
This patch updates the promise() member to match the current spec.
Specifically it removes the non-const overload and make the return
type of the const overload non-const.
This patch also makes the ASSERT_NOT_NOEXCEPT tests libc++ specific,
since other implementations may be free to strengthen the specification.
llvm-svn: 303895
VSO#391542 "Types can't be convertible to nullptr_t"
Also put internal bug numbers on the workarounds in test_workarounds.h for correlation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33290
llvm-svn: 303889
This C++17 Core Language feature isn't necessary when testing std::byte.
It's a minor convenience, but it limits test coverage to very new compilers.
This part activates the tests for more compilers.
llvm-svn: 302945
This C++17 Core Language feature isn't necessary when testing std::byte.
It's a minor convenience, but it limits test coverage to very new compilers.
This part changes the code.
Fixes D32386.
llvm-svn: 302944
This patch cleans up a number of issues reported by STL, including:
1) Fix duplicate is_convertible test.
2) Move non-standard reference_wrapper tests under test/libcxx
3) Fix assumption that sizeof(wchar_t) == 32 in the codecvt and
wstring_convert tests.
llvm-svn: 302870
This patch removes the clear() member from <string_view>. The
modifier was removed from the TS before it ever landed in the standard.
There is no reason libc++ should be providing this method.
llvm-svn: 302869
This patch attempts to make lookup_classname.pass.cpp usable against
other STL implementations by guarding the use of __regex_word. That being
said it seems likely that the test is still non-conforming due to how
libc++ handles the "w" character class.
llvm-svn: 302859
Clang 5.0 implements these changes here: 87cd035326
MSVC++ will implement these changes in the first toolset update to 2017.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33021
llvm-svn: 302710
Summary:
This patch fixes bugs.llvm.org/PR32979.
[util.smartptr.shared.const] says:
> In the constructor definitions below, enables shared_from_this with p, for a pointer p of type Y*, means
> that if Y has an unambiguous and accessible base class that is a specialization of enable_shared_from_-
> this.
This means that libc++ needs to respect the access specifier of the base class, and not attempt to construct
and enabled_shared_from_this base if it is private. However access specifiers don't affect overload resolution
so our current implementation will attempt to construct the private base.
This patch uses SFINAE to correctly detect if the shared_ptr input has an accessible enable_shared_from_this
base class.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33033
llvm-svn: 302709
This change works around a couple of bugs:
1. EDG doesn't like explicit constexpr in a derived class. This program:
struct Base {};
struct Derived : Base {
constexpr Derived() = default;
};
triggers "error: defaulted default constructor cannot be constexpr."
2. C1XX with /Za has no idea which constructor needs to be valid for copy elision.
The change also conditionally disables parts of the msvc_stdlib_force_include.hpp header that conflict with external configuration when _LIBCXX_IN_DEVCRT is defined.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32778
llvm-svn: 302707
This patch fixes the test failures and unexpected passes that occur
when testing against GCC 7. Specifically:
* don't mark __gcd as always inline because it's a recursive function. GCC diagnoses this.
* don't XFAIL the aligned allocation tests. GCC 7 supports them but not the -faligned-allocation option.
* Work around gcc.gnu.org/PR78489 in variants constructors.
llvm-svn: 302488
In T_size_size.pass, there is an explicit template argument to std::min to ask
for unsigned, to avoid type deduction errors. However, C1XX' warnings still
hate this use, because a 64 bit value (a size_t) is being passed to a function
accepting an unsigned (a 32 bit value).
Instead, change the tests to pass around std::size_t instances, and explicitly
narrow when constructing the string type under test. This also allows
removal of explicit template arguments to std::min.
llvm-svn: 302473
lcm.pass.cpp:
19: Update headers to that actually used in the test.
41: test0 was triggering narrowing warnings for all callers, because the
inputs were always ints, but some of the explicit template arguments were
smaller than that. Instead, have this function accept ints and static_cast
explicitly to the types we want before calling std::lcm.
47: Replace unnecessary ternary.
55: Use foo_t instead of typename foo<>::type
111/116: intX_t were not std::qualified but only <cfoo> headers were included.
141: C1XX has a bug where it interprets 2147483648 as unsigned int. Then the
negation trips "negation of unsigned value, result still unsigned" warnings.
Perma-workaround this issue by saying INT_MIN, which better documents the
intended behavior and avoids triggering warnings on C1XX.
gcd.pass.cpp:
Same changes as lcm.pass.cpp but for GCD.
llvm-svn: 302472
Summary:
This patch implements exception_ptr on Windows using the `__ExceptionPtrFoo` functions provided by MSVC.
The `__ExceptionPtrFoo` functions are defined inside the C++ standard library, `msvcprt`, which is unfortunate because it requires libc++ to link to the MSVC STL. However this doesn't seem to cause any immediate problems. However to be safe I kept all usages within the libc++ dylib so that user programs wouldn't have to link to MSVCPRT as well.
Note there are still 2 outstanding exception_ptr/nested_exception test failures.
* `current_exception.pass.cpp` needs to be rewritten for the Windows exception_ptr semantics which copy the exception every time.
* `rethrow_if_nested.pass.cpp` need investigation. It hits a stack overflow, likely from recursion.
This patch also gets most of the `<future>` tests passing as well.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, compnerd, bcraig, rmaprath, majnemer, BillyONeal, STL_MSFT
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32927
llvm-svn: 302393
Libc++ doesn't provide its own definitions of new/delete on Windows,
instead using the versions provided by VCRuntime. However VCRuntime
does not yet implement aligned new/delete so these tests fail.
It might be possible for libc++ to provide its own definitions only
for aligned new/delete as long as MSVC doesn't provide it. However
before this can be done libc++ needs to figure out how to implement
std::get_new_handler.
llvm-svn: 302384
This patch fixes test failures that occur on Windows because
the tests attempt to generate two distinct temp file names but
get the same name both time.
The fix for this is to create the first temp file before requesting
a second temporary file name. This ensures that the second name
will be unique.
llvm-svn: 302382
On Windows the function template `template <class T> void test()` has
the same mangled name when instantiated with the distinct types `void()`
and `void() noexcept`. When this occurs Clang emits an error. This error
was causing two type-traits tests to fail.
However this can be worked around by using class templates instead of
function templates, which is what this patch does to fix the errors.
llvm-svn: 302380
Summary:
In https://bugs.freebsd.org/207918, Daniel McRobb describes how using
std::showbase with ostreams can cause truncation of unsigned long long
when output format is octal. In fact, this can even happen with
unsigned int and unsigned long.
To ensure this does not happen, add one additional character to the
do_put buffers if std::showbase is on. Also add a test case.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32670
llvm-svn: 302362
Libc++ is used as a system library on macOS and iOS (amongst others). In order
for users to be able to compile a binary that is intended to be deployed to an
older version of the platform, clang provides the
availability attribute <https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#availability>_
that can be placed on declarations to describe the lifecycle of a symbol in the
library.
See docs/DesignDocs/AvailabilityMarkup.rst for more information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31739
llvm-svn: 302172
_HAS_CXX17 indicates whether MSVC's STL is in C++17 mode.
In MSVC there's a distinction between CRT headers like stdlib.h and STL headers
like cstdlib. Only the STL headers drag in yvals.h, our internal STL-wide header
that defines internal macros like _HAS_CXX17.
_HAS_CXX17 is an MSVC STL library macro, unconditionally defined. We centralize
everything on this, because we have to ask different questions to determine
whether C1XX, EDG, or Clang is in 14 or 17 mode, and we additionally permit
users to override the detection in one way (it's okay to ask for 17 from the
compiler, but only 14 from the libs, at least for the moment; only noexcept
in the type system will give us a headache).
As this header is for testing MSVC's STL, we can assume _HAS_CXX17 is defined.
Fixes D32726.
llvm-svn: 302104
For std::isinf, the standard requires effectively calling isinf as
double from Libc for integral types. But integral types are never
infinite; we don't need to call Libc to return false.
Also short-circuit other functions where Libc won't have interesting
answers: signbit, fpclassify, isfinite, isnan, and isnormal.
I added correctness tests for integral types since we're no longer
deferring to Libc.
In review it was pointed out that in future revisions of the C++
standard we may add more types to std::is_arithmetic (e.g.,
std::is_fixed_point). I'll leave it to a future commit to hack this to
allow using math functions on those. We'll need to change things like
__libcpp_fpclassify anyway, so I'm not sure anything here would really
be future-proof.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D31561
rdar://problem/31361223
llvm-svn: 301060
* Cover optional's emplace-from-initializer_list overload
* Verify that any::emplace and optional::emplace return a reference to the correct type even for throwing cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32106
llvm-svn: 301055
This patch XFAIL's a number of tests under test/libcxx when on Windows.
These failures need more investigation or patches to either Clang or libc++
but for now we don't want them to prevent the bot from going green.
llvm-svn: 300941
These tests were unconditionally asserting that optional and unique_ptr declare throwing hashes, but MSVC++ implements conditional noexcept forwarding that of the underlying hash function. As a result we were failing these tests but there's nothing forbidding strengthening noexcept in that way.
Changed the ASSERT_NOT_NOEXCEPT asserts to use types which themselves have non-noexcept hash functions.
llvm-svn: 300516
This patch cleans up all usages of the following feature test macros inside
<vector> and its tests:
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_RVALUE_REFERENCES
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_VARIADICS
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_GENERALIZED_INITIALIZERS
Where needed the above guards were replaced with _LIBCPP_CXX03_LANG.
llvm-svn: 300410
This patch overhauls both specializations of unique_ptr while implementing
the following LWG issues:
* LWG 2801 - This issue constrains unique_ptr's constructors when the deleter type
is not default constructible. Additionally it adds SFINAE conditions
to unique_ptr<T[]>::unique_ptr(Up).
* LWG 2905 - This issue reworks the unique_ptr(pointer, /* see below */ deleter)
constructors so that they correctly SFINAE when the deleter argument cannot
be used to construct the stored deleter.
* LWG 2520 - This issue fixes initializing unique_ptr<T[]> from nullptr.
Libc++ had previously implemented this issue, but the suggested resolution
still broke initialization from NULL. This patch re-works the
unique_ptr<T[]>(Up, deleter) overloads so that they accept NULL as well
as nullptr.
llvm-svn: 300406
This patch almost entirely rewrites the unique_ptr tests. There are a couple
of reasons for this:
A) Most of the *.fail.cpp tests were either incorrect or could be better written
as a *.pass.cpp test that uses <type_traits> to check if certain operations
are valid (Ex. Using static_assert(!std::is_copy_constructible_v<T>) instead
of writing a failure test).
B) [unique.ptr.runtime] has very poor test coverage. Many of the constructors
and assignment operators have to tests at all. The special members that have
tests have very few test cases and are typically way out of date.
C) The tests for [unique.ptr.single] and [unique.ptr.runtime] are largely
duplicates of each other. This means common requirements have two different
sets of tests in two different test files. This makes the tests harder to
maintain than if there was a single copy.
To address (A) this patch changes almost all of the *.fail.cpp tests into
.pass.cpp tests using type traits; Allowing the *.fail.cpp tests to be removed.
The address (B) and (C) the tests for [unique.ptr.single] and [unique.ptr.runtime]
have been combined into a single directory, allowing both specializations to share
common tests. Tests specific to the single/runtime specializations are given the
suffix "*.single.pass.cpp" or "*.runtime.pass.cpp".
Finally the unique.ptr test have been moved into the correct directory according
to the standard. Specifically they have been removed from "utilities/memory" into
"utilities/smartptr".
PS. This patch also adds newly written tests for upcoming unique_ptr changes/fixes.
However since these tests don't currently pass they are guarded by the macro
TEST_WORKAROUND_UPCOMING_UNIQUE_PTR_CHANGES. This allows other STL's to validate
the tests before libc++ implements the changes. The relevant libc++ changes should
land in the next week.
llvm-svn: 300388
path::iterator isn't a strictly conforming iterator. Specifically
it stashes the current element inside the iterator. This leads to
UB when used with reverse_iterator since it requires the element
to outlive the lifetime of the iterator.
This patch adds a static_assert inside reverse_iterator to disallow
"stashing iterator types", and it tags path::iterator as such a type.
Additionally this patch removes all uses of reverse_iterator<path::iterator>
within the tests.
llvm-svn: 300164
std::unique_ptr's default constructor must be constexpr in order
to allow constant initialization to take place for static objects;
Even though we can never have a constexpr unique_ptr variable since
it's not a literal type.
This patch adds tests that constant initialization takes place by
using the __attribute__((require_constant_initialization)) macro.
llvm-svn: 300158
r300140 introduced a bunch of failures by changing the internal
interface provided by __compressed_pair. This patch fixes all of
the failures caused by the new interface by changing the existing
code to use it.
In addition to those changes this patch also fixes two separate
issues causing test failures:
1) Fix the member swap definition for __map_value_compare. Previously
the swap was incorrectly configured to swap the comparator as const.
2) Fix an assertion failure in futures.task.members/ctor_func_alloc.pass.cpp
that incorrectly expected a move to take place when a single copy is sufficient.
There is one remaining failure regarding make_shared. I'll commit a fix for that
shortly.
llvm-svn: 300148
Summary:
__compressed_pair takes and passes it's constructor arguments by value. This causes arguments to be moved 3 times instead of once. This patch addresses that issue and fixes `constexpr` on the constructors.
I would rather have this fix than D27564, and I'm fairly confident it's not ABI breaking but I'm not 100% sure.
I prefer this solution because it removes a lot of code and makes the implementation *much* smaller.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, K-ballo
Reviewed By: K-ballo
Subscribers: K-ballo, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27565
llvm-svn: 300140
For reference deleter types the const qualifier on the return type
of get_deleter() should be ignored, and a non-const deleter should
be returned.
This patch fixes a bug where "const deleter_type&" is incorrectly
formed.
llvm-svn: 300121
These tests were unconditionally asserting that optional and unique_ptr declare throwing hashes, but MSVC++ implements conditional noexcept forwarding that of the underlying hash function. As a result we were failing these tests but there's nothing forbidding strengthening noexcept in that way.
Changed the ASSERT_NOT_NOEXCEPT asserts to use types which themselves have non-noexcept hash functions.
llvm-svn: 299734
Summary:
By manipulating a local variable in the loop, when the loop can
be optimized away (due to no non-trivial destructors), this lets
it be fully optimized away and we modify the __end_ separately.
This results in a substantial improvement in the generated code.
Prior to this change, this would be generated (on x86_64):
movq (%rdi), %rdx
movq 8(%rdi), %rcx
cmpq %rdx, %rcx
je LBB2_2
leaq -12(%rcx), %rax
subq %rdx, %rax
movabsq $-6148914691236517205, %rdx ## imm = 0xAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAB
mulq %rdx
shrq $3, %rdx
notq %rdx
leaq (%rdx,%rdx,2), %rax
leaq (%rcx,%rax,4), %rax
movq %rax, 8(%rdi)
And after:
movq (%rdi), %rax
movq %rax, 8(%rdi)
This brings this in line with what other implementations do.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25241
llvm-svn: 298601
Summary: This is my attempt to work around the C1XX bug described to me by @BillyONeal.
Reviewers: BillyONeal, STL_MSFT, CaseyCarter
Reviewed By: BillyONeal
Subscribers: cfe-commits, BillyONeal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31260
llvm-svn: 298554
The tests for libc++ specify -target on the command-line to the
compiler, but this is problematic for a few reasons.
Firstly, the -target option isn't supported on Apple platforms. Parts
of the triple get dropped and ignored. Instead, software should be
compiled with a combination of the -arch and -m<name>-version-min
options.
Secondly, the generic "darwin" target references a kernel version
instead of a platform version. Each platform has its own independent
versions (with different versions of libc++.1.dylib), independent of the
version of the Darwin kernel.
This commit adds support to the LIT infrastructure for testing against
Apple platforms using -arch and -platform options.
If the host is not on OS X, or the compiler type is not clang or apple-clang, then this commit has NFC.
If the host is on OS X and --param=target_triple=... is specified, then a warning is emitted to use arch and platform instead. Besides the warning, there's NFC.
If the host is on OS X and *no* target-triple is specified, then use the new deployment target logic. This uses two new lit parameters, --param=arch=<arch> and --param=platform=<platform>. <platform> has the form <name>[<version>].
By default, arch is auto-detected from clang -dumpmachine, and platform is "macosx".
If the platform doesn't have a version:
For "macosx", the version is auto-detected from the host system using sw_vers. This may give a different version than the SDK, since new SDKs can be installed on older hosts.
Otherwise, the version is auto-detected from the SDK version using xcrun --show-sdk-path.
-arch <arch> -m<name>-version-min=<version> is added to the compiler flags.
The target triple is computed as <arch>-apple-<platform>. It is *not* passed to clang, but it is available for XFAIL and UNSUPPORTED (as is with_system_cxx_lib=<target>).
For convenience, apple-darwin and <arch>-apple-darwin are added to the set of available features.
There were a number of tests marked to XFAIL on x86_64-apple-darwin11
and x86_64-apple-darwin12. I updated these to
x86_64-apple-macosx10.7 and x86_64-apple-macosx10.8.
llvm-svn: 297798
r296565 attempted to add better diagnostics when an unordered container
is instantiated with a hash that doesn't meet the Hash requirements.
However I mistakenly checked the wrong set of requirements. Specifically
it checked if the hash met the requirements for specializations of
std::hash. However these requirements are stricter than the generic
Hash requirements.
This patch fixes the assertions to only check the Hash requirements.
llvm-svn: 296919
The test is passing with c++11 and c++14 but not c++1z on this
particular version of the compiler. Try to use lit boolean condition
to satisfy this constaint.
llvm-svn: 296725
This reverts commit r296712. It broke our bot.
It turns out that the test is passing with c++11 and c++14 but
not c++1z on this particular version of the compiler. Since one
job is defaulting to c++1z and the other is testing all config I'm
not sure how to fix this...
llvm-svn: 296724
This tests is failing in XCode 7.0. But Xcode 7.3 that shipped
an updated clang has this test passing. This is fixing green dragon
which runs this configuration.
llvm-svn: 296712
These tests are failing in XCode 8.0, 8.1, and 8.2, but not in Xcode
8.3. Annoyingly the version numbering for clang does not follow Xcode
and is bumped to 8.1 only in Xcode 8.3. So Xfailing apple-clang-8.0
should catch all cases here.
llvm-svn: 296704
This patch changes the CMake configuration so that it always
generates the test/lit.site.cfg file, even when testing is disabled.
This allows users to test libc++ without requiring them to have
a full LLVM checkout on their machine.
llvm-svn: 296685
This patch adds a static assertion that the specified hash meets
the requirements of an enabled hash, and it ensures that the static
assertion is evaluated before __compressed_pair is instantiated.
That way the static assertion diagnostic is emitted first.
llvm-svn: 296565
This patch fixes llvm.org/PR32097 by using the __is_abstract
builtin type-trait instead of the previous library-only implementation.
All supported compilers provide this trait. I've tested as far
back as Clang 3.2, GCC 4.6 and MSVC trunk.
llvm-svn: 296561
Summary:
`ConstexprTestTypes::NoCtors` is an aggregate type (and consequently a literal type) in C++17,
but not in C++14 since it has a base class. This patch updates the comment to accurately describe the reason for the XFAIL.
Reviewers: EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30481
llvm-svn: 296558
The clang assertion causing these tests failing with sanitizer is fixed
in r295794. All the bots running libcxx tests should be upgraded and
running the compiler with the fix.
llvm-svn: 296385
Summary:
This patch implements [P0003R5](http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2016/p0003r5.html) which removes exception specifications from C++17.
The only changes to the library are removing `set_unexpected`, `get_unexpected`, `unexpected`, and `unexpected_handler`. These functions can be re-enabled in C++17 using `_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_UNEXPECTED_FUNCTIONS`.
@mclow.lists what do you think about removing stuff is this way?
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: mclow.lists, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28172
llvm-svn: 295406
Summary:
This patch fixes http://llvm.org/PR31938. The description below is copy/pasted from the bug:
The standard says:
template<class charT, class traits = char_traits<charT>,
class Allocator = allocator<charT>>
class basic_string {
using value_type = typename traits::char_type;
// ...
basic_string(const charT* s, const Allocator& a = Allocator());
};
libc++ actually chooses to declare the constructor as
basic_string(const value_type* s, const Allocator& a = Allocator());
The implicit deduction guides from class template argument deduction make what was previously an implementation detail visible:
std::basic_string s = "foo"; // error, can't deduce charT.
The constructor in question is in the libc++ DSO, but fortunately it looks like fixing this will not result in an ABI break.
@rsmith How does this look? I did more than just the constructors mentioned in the PR, but IDK how far to take it.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29863
llvm-svn: 295393
wchar_t is not as portable as char32_t. On Windows, wchar_t is
16-bytes and on Linux 32-bits. The conversion to utf8 causes the
characters to exceed the limits on char16_t, resulting in tautological
comparisons.
llvm-svn: 294917
This test explicitly is checking the behaviour of std::thread and
pthread interactions. This requires pthreads. Add an appropriate
requirement.
llvm-svn: 294903
This test validates that the lock_guard is declared variadically across
C++03 and C++11. Given the lack of stable ABI on Windows and the fact
that the RTTI encoding on Windows is different, XFAIL it on that target.
llvm-svn: 294720
When running the test under clang-cl, we do not report `__GNUC__`, which
is needed to supress the warnings which are being treated as errors.
llvm-svn: 294719
Libc++ frequently creates and uses utilities written in python.
Currently there are python modules under both libcxx/test and
libcxx/util. My goal with these changes is to consolidate them
into a single package under libcxx/utils/libcxx.
llvm-svn: 294644
A static assertion was misfiring since it checked
is_callable<Visitor, decltype(__variant_alt<T>.value)>. However
the decltype expression doesn't capture the value category as
required. This patch applies extra braces to decltype to fix
that.
llvm-svn: 294612
Filesystems are not required to maintain a hard link count consistent
with number of subdirectories. For example, on btrfs all directories
have nlink==1. Account for that in the test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29706
llvm-svn: 294431
In addition to the PR for LWG 2773 this patch also ensures
that each of std::ignores constructors or assignment operators
are constexpr.
llvm-svn: 294165
When compiled with Clang for Windows, this was emitting "enumerator value
evaluates to 4294967295, which cannot be narrowed to type 'int' [-Wc++11-narrowing]".
The test should more strenuously avoid poking this ABI deficiency (and it
already has coverage for explicitly specified underlying types).
Fixes D29140.
llvm-svn: 294159
libcxx's tests use various C Standard Library functions that have been
marked by MSVC's CRT as deprecated by Microsoft (not by ISO).
libcxx's usage is cromulent (just checking with decltype to see if the functions
are being dragged in by various headers as required by the Standard), so
defining _CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS will silence the warnings in a targeted manner.
This needs to be defined before including any CRT headers.
Also, make this file prettier.
Fixes D29138.
llvm-svn: 294157
test/std/strings/string.classes/typedefs.pass.cpp
Actually test what basic_string's typedefs stand for.
test/std/utilities/meta/meta.trans/meta.trans.other/result_of11.pass.cpp
NotDerived and ND were completely unused.
test/std/utilities/utility/pairs/pairs.pair/default.pass.cpp
P2 was mistakenly not being used. Yes, that's
right: -Wunused-local-typedef CAUGHT A MISTAKE! AMAZING!
Fixes D29137.
llvm-svn: 294156
Guard typedefs and static_asserts with _LIBCPP_VERSION.
test/std/containers/sequences/vector.bool/move_assign_noexcept.pass.cpp
test/std/containers/sequences/vector.bool/move_noexcept.pass.cpp
test/std/containers/sequences/vector.bool/swap_noexcept.pass.cpp
Additionally deal with conditional compilation.
test/std/containers/associative/map/map.cons/move_noexcept.pass.cpp
test/std/containers/associative/multimap/multimap.cons/move_noexcept.pass.cpp
Additionally deal with typedefs used by other typedefs.
Fixes D29135.
llvm-svn: 294154
N4100 states that an error shall be reported if
`!exists(p) || !is_directory(p)`. We were missing the first half of the
conditional. Invert the error and normal code paths to make the code
easier to follow.
llvm-svn: 294127
Summary:
num_put::put uses %p for pointer types, but the exact format of %p is
implementation defined behavior for the C library. Compare output to
snprintf for portability.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29197
llvm-svn: 293926
Pending LIT changes are about to remove the REQUIRES-ANY keyword
in place of supporting boolean && and || within "REQUIRES". This
patch prepares libc++ for that change so that when applied
the bots don't lose their mind.
llvm-svn: 292901
Summary:
Exactly what the title says.
This patch also adds a `std::hash<nullptr_t>` specialization in C++17, but it was not added by this paper and I can't find the actual paper that adds it.
See http://wg21.link/P0513R0 for more info.
If there are no comments in the next couple of days I'll commit this
Reviewers: mclow.lists, K-ballo, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28938
llvm-svn: 292684
Summary: This patch adjusts the newly added `msvc_stdlib_force_include.hpp` so that it also works when used with `clang++`.
Reviewers: STL_MSFT
Reviewed By: STL_MSFT
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28917
llvm-svn: 292539
No functional change; nothing includes this, instead our test harness
injects it via the /FI compiler option.
No code review; blessed in advance by EricWF.
llvm-svn: 292443
MSVC has compiler warnings C4127 "conditional expression is constant" (enabled
by /W4) and C6326 "Potential comparison of a constant with another constant"
(enabled by /analyze). They're potentially useful, although they're slightly
annoying to library devs who know what they're doing. In the latest version of
the compiler, C4127 is suppressed when the compiler sees simple tests like
"if (name_of_thing)", so extracting comparison expressions into named
constants is a workaround. At the same time, using std::integral_constant
avoids C6326, which doesn't look at template arguments.
test/std/containers/sequences/vector.bool/emplace.pass.cpp
Replace 1 == 1 with true, which is the same as far as the library is concerned.
Fixes D28837.
llvm-svn: 292432
Adding `path::operator=(string_type&&)` made the expression `p = {}`
ambiguous. This path fixes that ambiguity by making the `string&&`
overload a template so it ranks lower during overload resolution.
llvm-svn: 292345
This is the subject of an active NB comment. Regardless of what the Working
Paper currently says, asking this question is morally wrong, because the
answer can change when the type is completed. C1XX now detects such
precondition violations and complains about them; perhaps Clang should too.
Fixes D28591.
llvm-svn: 292281
When support for `basic_string_view` was added to string it also
added new assignment operators from `basic_string_view`. These caused
ambiguity when assigning from a braced initializer. This patch fixes
that regression by making the basic_string_view assignment operator
rank lower in overload resolution by making it a template.
llvm-svn: 292276
This patch contains multiple cleanups and fixes to better support building on
Windows.
* [Test] Fix handling of library runtime search paths by correctly adding them
to the PATH variable when running the tests.
* [Test] Don't explicitly force "--target=i686-pc-windows" when running the
test suite. Clang++ seems to deduce the correct target.
* [Test] Fix `.sh.cpp` tests on Windows by properly escaping flags used in
shell commands. Specifically windows style paths which included spaces
were causing these tests to fail.
* [CMake] Add "vcruntime" to the list of supported C++ ABI libraries in CMake, and
teach the test suite how to handle it. For now libc++ defaults to using
"vcruntime" on Windows except when libc++abi is in tree; That is probably
a bug and should be changed to always use vcruntime, at least for now.
* [Misc] Move the "c++-build" include directory to the libc++ binary dir
instead of the top level project dir and rename it "c++build". This is just
misc cleanup. Libc++ shouldn't be creating internal build files and directories
at the top-level projects root.
* [Misc] Build type_info's destructor when building for MSVC. This is a temporary
work around to prevent link errors until we have a proper type_info
implementation.
llvm-svn: 292157
Summary: This patch allows libc++ to be built against the debug MSVC runtimes instead of just the release ones.
Reviewers: rnk, majnemer, compnerd, smeenai
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28725
llvm-svn: 292006
Summary:
This patch attempts to fix the libc++ build/link so that it doesn't use an default C++ libraries on Windows. This is needed to prevent linking to MSVC's STL library.
Additionally this patch changes libc++ so that it is always linked with the non-debug DLL's (e.g. `/MD`). This is needed so that the test suite can correctly link the same libraries without needing to know which configuration `c++.dll` was linked with.
Reviewers: compnerd, rnk, majnemer, kimgr, awson, halyavin, smeenai
Subscribers: cfe-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28441
llvm-svn: 292001
When -pedantic-errors is specified `__has_extension(<feature>)` is always
false when it would otherwise be true. This causes C++03 <atomic> to break
along with other issues.
This patch avoids the above problem by using __is_identifier(...) instead since
it is not affected by -pedantic-errors. For example instead of checking for
__has_extension(c_atomics) we now check `!__is_identifier(_Atomic)`, which
is only true when _Atomic is not a keyword provided by the compiler.
This patch applies similar changes to the detection logic for __decltype and
__nullptr as well.
Note that it does not apply this change to the C++03
`static_assert` macro since -Wc11-extensions warnings generated by expanding
that macro will appear in user code, and will not be suppressed as part of a
system header.
llvm-svn: 291995
Clang recently added a `diagnose_if(cond, msg, type)` attribute
which can be used to generate diagnostics when `cond` is a constant
expression that evaluates to true. Otherwise no attribute has no
effect.
This patch adds _LIBCPP_DIAGNOSE_ERROR/WARNING macros which
use this new attribute. Additionally this patch implements
a diagnostic message when a non-const-callable comparator is
given to a container.
Note: For now the warning version of the diagnostic is useless
within libc++ since warning diagnostics are suppressed by the
system header pragma. I'm going to work on fixing this.
llvm-svn: 291961
The destructor of std::promise needs to construct a std::future_error
exception so it calls std::make_exception_ptr. But under
libcpp-no-exceptions this will trigger an abort.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27614
llvm-svn: 291550
Windows is greedy and it defines the identifier `__out` as a macro.
This patch renames all conflicting libc++ identifiers in order
to correctly work on Windows.
llvm-svn: 291345
On Windows the runtime search path for DLL's is the same as PATH.
This patch changes the test suite to add the libc++ build directory
to the runtime PATH.
llvm-svn: 291309
Summary:
This patch attempts to clean up the macro configuration mess in `<__threading_support>`, specifically the mess involving external threading variants. Additionally this patch adds design documentation for `<__threading_support>` and the configuration macros it uses.
The primary change in this patch is separating the idea of an "external API" provided by `<__external_threading>` and the idea of having an external threading library. Now `_LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_API_EXTERNAL` means that libc++ should use `<__external_threading>` and that the header is expected to exist. Additionally the new macro `_LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_LIBRARY_EXTERNAL` is now used to configure for using an "external library" with the default threading API.
Reviewers: compnerd, rmaprath
Subscribers: smeenai, cfe-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28316
llvm-svn: 291275
This patch gets the test suite "working" on Windows, although
none of the tests pass.
In order to reuse the existing configuration, which uses UNIX
style flags not accepted by clang-cl, this patch only works with clang++.
When clang-cl is specified the test harness secretly looks for
clang++ and then it configures it using the INCLUDE and LIB enviroment
variables.
This is very much a work in progress.
llvm-svn: 291072
The test was previously set to XFAIL if __cpp_structured_bindings
wasn't defined. However there are Clang 4.0 versions which do not
define this macro but do provide structured bindings, which causes
the test to pass unexpectedly.
This patch changes the XFAIL to an UNSUPPORTED.
llvm-svn: 291060
In ABI v1 libc++ implements std::pointer_safety as a class type instead
of an enumeration. However this class type does not provide
a default constructor as it should. This patch adds that default constructor.
llvm-svn: 291059
In the C++ standard `std::pointer_safety` is defined
as a C++11 strongly typed enum. However libc++ currently defines
it as a class type which simulates a C++11 enumeration. This
can be detected in valid C++ code.
This patch introduces an the _LIBCPP_ABI_POINTER_SAFETY_ENUM_TYPE ABI option.
When defined `std::pointer_safety` is implemented as an enum type.
Unfortunatly this also means it can no longer be provided as an extension
in C++03.
Additionally this patch moves the definition for `get_pointer_safety()`
out of the dylib, and into the headers. New usages of `get_pointer_safety()`
will now use the inline version instead of the dylib version. However in
order to keep the dylib ABI compatible the old definition is explicitly
compiled into it.
llvm-svn: 291046
Summary:
This patch attempts to re-implement a fix for LWG 2770, but not the actual specified PR.
The PR for 2770 specifies tuple_size<T const> as only conditionally providing a `::value` member. However C++17 structured bindings require `tuple_size<T const>` to be complete only if `tuple_size<T>` is also complete. Therefore this patch implements only provides the specialization `tuple_size<T CV>` iff `tuple_size<T>` is a complete type.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR31513.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith, mpark
Subscribers: mpark, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28222
llvm-svn: 291019
These tests were using malloc()'s return value without checking for null,
which MSVC's /analyze rightly warns about. Asserting that the pointer is
non-null both expresses the test's intention and silences the warning.
Fixes D27785.
llvm-svn: 290921
after r290850
Before r290850, building libcxx with -DLIBCXX_HAS_EXTERNAL_THREAD_API=ON had two
uses:
- Allow platform vendors to plug-in an __external_threading header which
should take care of the entire threading infrastructure of libcxx
- Allow testing of an externally-threaded library build; where the thread API
is declared using pthread data structures, and the implementation of this
API is provided as a separate library (test/support/external_threads.cpp)
and linked-in when running the test suite.
r290850 breaks the second use case (pthread data structures are no longer
available). This patch re-stores the ability to build+test an
externally-threaded library variant on a pthread based system.
llvm-svn: 290878
Refactor the header to allow us to implement alternate threading models
with alternate data structures. Take the opportunity to clang-format
the area. This will allow us to avoid re-declaring the interfaces for
Win32 threading. NFC
llvm-svn: 290850
This patch re-commits a previous attempt to support building libc++ w/o
an ABI library. That patch was originally reverted because:
1) It forgot to teach the test suite about "default" ABI libraries.
2) Some LLVM builders don't clear the CMake cache between builds. The previous
patch caused those builders to fail since their old cache entry for
LIBCXX_CXX_ABI="" is no longer valid.
The updated patch addresses both issues. It works around (2) by adding
a hack to force the builders to update their cache entries. The hack will
be removed shortly once all LLVM builders have run.
Original commit message
-----------------------
Typically libc++ uses libc++abi or libcxxrt to provide the ABI and runtime bits
of the C++ STL. However we also support building w/o an ABI library entirely.
This patch fixes building libc++ w/o an ABI library (and incorporates the
`~type_info()` fix in D28211).
The main changes in this patch are:
1) Add `-DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI=default` instead of using the empty string to mean "default".
2) Fix CMake bits which treated "none" as "default" on OS X.
3) Teach the source files to respect `-D_LIBCPP_BUILDING_HAS_NO_ABI_LIBRARY`.
4) Define ~type_info() when _LIBCPP_BUILDING_HAS_NO_ABI_LIBRARY is defined.
Unfortunately this patch doesn't help clean up the macro mess that we use to
configure for different ABI libraries.
llvm-svn: 290849
This patch implements the correct PR for LWG 2770. It also makes the primary
tuple_size template incomplete again which fixes part of llvm.org/PR31513.
llvm-svn: 290846
There were two problems with the initial fix.
1. The added tests flushed out that we misconfigured _LIBCPP_EXPLICIT with GCC.
2. Because the boolean type was a member function template it caused weird link
errors. I'm assuming due to the vague linkage rules. This time the bool type
is a non-template member function pointer. That seems to have fixed the
failing tests. Plus it will end up generating less symbols overall, since
the bool type is no longer per instantiation.
original commit message below
-----------------------------
std::basic_ios has an operator bool(). In C++11 and later
it is explicit, and only allows contextual implicit conversions.
However explicit isn't available in C++03 which causes std::istream (et al)
to have an implicit conversion to int. This can easily cause ambiguities
when calling operator<< and operator>>.
This patch uses a "bool-like" type in C++03 to work around this. The
"bool-like" type is an arbitrary pointer to member function type. It
will not convert to either int or void*, but will convert to bool.
llvm-svn: 290754
std::basic_ios has an operator bool(). In C++11 and later
it is explicit, and only allows contextual implicit conversions.
However explicit isn't available in C++03 which causes std::istream (et al)
to have an implicit conversion to int. This can easily cause ambiguities
when calling operator<< and operator>>.
This patch uses a "bool-like" type in C++03 to work around this. The
"bool-like" type is an arbitrary pointer to member function type. It
will not convert to either int or void*, but will convert to bool.
llvm-svn: 290750
Back in r240527 I added a knob to prevent thread-unsafe functions from
being exposed. mblen(), mbtowc() and wctomb() were also added to this
list, as the latest issue of POSIX doesn't require these functions to be
thread-safe.
It turns out that the only circumstance in which these functions are not
thread-safe is in case they are used in combination with state-dependent
character sets (e.g., Shift-JIS). According to Austin Group Bug 708,
these character sets "[...] are mostly a relic of the past and which
were never supported on most POSIX systems".
Though in many cases the use of these functions can be prevented by
using the reentrant counterparts, they are the only functions that allow
you to query whether the locale's character set is state-dependent. This
means that omitting these functions removes actual functionality.
Let's be a bit less pedantic and drop the guards around these functions.
Links:
http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=708http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2037.htm
Reviewed by: ericwf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21436
llvm-svn: 290748
This patch implements changes to allow _LIBCPP_ASSERT to throw on failure
instead of aborting. The main changes needed to do this are:
1. Change _LIBCPP_ASSERT to call a handler via a replacable function pointer
instead of calling abort directly. Additionally this patch implements two
handler functions, one which aborts and another that throws an exception.
2. Add _NOEXCEPT_DEBUG macro for disabling noexcept spec on function which
contain _LIBCPP_ASSERT. This is required in order to prevent assertion
failures throwing through a noexcept function. This macro has no effect
unless _LIBCPP_DEBUG_USE_EXCEPTIONS is defined.
Having a non-aborting _LIBCPP_ASSERT is very important to allow sane testing of
debug mode. Currently we can only have one test case per file, since the test
case will cause the program to abort. Testing debug mode this way would require
thousands of test files, most of which would be 95% boiler plate. I don't think
this is a feasible strategy. Fortunately using a throwing debug handler solves
these issues.
Additionally this patch rewrites the documentation for debug mode.
llvm-svn: 290651
This patch reverts the changes to tuple which fixed construction from
types derived from tuple. It breaks the code mentioned in llvm.org/PR31384.
I'll follow this commit up with a test case.
llvm-svn: 289773
In list::remove we collect the nodes we're removing in a seperate
list instance. However we construct this list using the default
constructor which default constructs the allocator. However allocators
are not required to be default constructible. This patch fixes the
construction of the second list.
llvm-svn: 289735
test/std/containers/container.adaptors/queue/queue.cons.alloc/ctor_container_alloc.pass.cpp
test/std/containers/container.adaptors/stack/stack.cons.alloc/ctor_container_alloc.pass.cpp
Iterate with C::size_type because that's what operator[] takes.
test/std/containers/sequences/vector/contiguous.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.require/contiguous.pass.cpp
Add static_cast<typename C::difference_type> because that's what the iterator's operator+ takes.
Fixes D27777.
llvm-svn: 289734
Summary:
The standard requires tuple have the following constructors:
```
tuple(tuple<OtherTypes...> const&);
tuple(tuple<OtherTypes...> &&);
tuple(pair<T1, T2> const&);
tuple(pair<T1, T2> &&);
tuple(array<T, N> const&);
tuple(array<T, N> &&);
```
However libc++ implements these as a single constructor with the signature:
```
template <class TupleLike, enable_if_t<__is_tuple_like<TupleLike>::value>>
tuple(TupleLike&&);
```
This causes the constructor to reject types derived from tuple-like types; Unlike if we had all of the concrete overloads, because they cause the derived->base conversion in the signature.
This patch fixes this issue by detecting derived types and the tuple-like base they are derived from. It does this by creating an overloaded function with signatures for each of tuple/pair/array and checking if the possibly derived type can convert to any of them.
This patch fixes [PR17550]( https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=17550)
This patch
Reviewers: mclow.lists, K-ballo, mpark, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27606
llvm-svn: 289727
No code changes were needed, but I updated a few tests.
Also resolved P0509 and P0521, which required no changes to the library or tests.
This patch was reverted due to llvm.org/PR31016. There is a bug in Clang 3.7
which causes default.pass.cpp to fails. That test is now marked as XFAIL for that
clang version.
This patch was originally authored by Marshall Clow.
llvm-svn: 289708
After r289363, these tests were triggering MSVC x64 warning C4267
"conversion from 'size_t' to 'int', possible loss of data" by taking 0, 2, and 10
as std::size_t, then constructing error_code(int, const error_category&) or
error_condition(int, const error_category&) from that (N4618 19.5.3.2
[syserr.errcode.constructors]/3, 19.5.4.2 [syserr.errcondition.constructors]/3).
The fix is simple: take these ints as int, pass them to the int-taking
constructor, and perform a value-preserving static_cast<std::size_t>
when comparing them to `std::size_t result`.
Fixes D27691.
llvm-svn: 289512
Certain source control systems like to set the read-only bit on their files,
which interferes with opening "test.dat" for both input and output.
Fortunately, we can work around this without losing test coverage.
Now, the ifstream.cons tests have comments referring to the ofstream.cons tests.
There, we're creating writable files (not checked into source control),
where the ifstream constructor tests will succeed.
Fixes D26814.
llvm-svn: 289463
These swap tests were swapping non-POCS non-equal allocators which
is undefined behavior. This patch changes the tests to use allocators
which compare equal. In order to test that the allocators were not
swapped I added an "id" field to test_allocator which does not
participate in equality but does propagate across copies/swaps.
This patch is based off of D26623 which was submitted by STL.
llvm-svn: 289358
Summary:
The underlying C locales provide the `thousands_sep` and `decimal_point` as strings, possible with more than one character. We currently don't handle this case even for `wchar_t`.
This patch properly converts the mbs -> wide character for `moneypunct_byname<wchar_t>`. For the `moneypunct_byname<char>` case we attempt to narrow the WC and if that fails we also attempt to translate it to some reasonable value. For example we translate U00A0 (non-breaking space) into U0020 (regular space). If none of these conversions succeed then we simply allow the base class to provide a fallback value.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: vangyzen, george.burgess.iv, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24218
llvm-svn: 289347
test/support/test_macros.h
For convenience/greppability, add macros for libcxx-specific static_asserts about noexceptness.
(Moving the definitions of ASSERT_NOEXCEPT/ASSERT_NOT_NOEXCEPT isn't technically necessary
because they're macros, but I think it's better style to define stuff before using it.)
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.tuple/tuple.apply/apply.pass.cpp
There was a completely unused `TrackedCallable obj;`.
apply() isn't depicted with conditional noexcept in C++17.
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.tuple/tuple.apply/make_from_tuple.pass.cpp
Now that we have LIBCPP_ASSERT_NOEXCEPT, use it.
Fixes D27622.
llvm-svn: 289264
This patch changes where the C++ ABI headers are put during the build. Previously
they were put in the top level include directory (not the libc++ header directory).
However that just polutes the top level directory. Instead this patch creates a special
directory to put them in. The reason they can't be put under c++/v1 until after the build
is because libc++ uses the in-source headers, so we can't add the include path of the libc++
headers in the object dir.
Additionally this patch teaches the test suite how to find the ABI headers,
and adds a demangling utility to help debug tests with.
llvm-svn: 289195
This patch removes libc++'s tuple extension which allowed it to be
constructed from fewer initializers than elements; with the remaining
elements being default constructed. However the implicit version of
this extension breaks conforming code. For example:
int fun(std::string);
int fun(std::tuple<std::string, int>);
int x = fun("hello"); // ambigious
Because existing code may already depend on this extension it can be re-enabled
by defining _LIBCPP_ENABLE_TUPLE_IMPLICIT_REDUCED_ARITY_EXTENSION.
Note that the explicit version of this extension is still supported,
although it's somewhat less useful than the implicit one.
llvm-svn: 289158
test/std/input.output/iostream.format/input.streams/istream.unformatted/get.pass.cpp
Add static_cast<char> because basic_istream::get() returns int_type (N4606 27.7.2.3 [istream.unformatted]/4).
test/std/input.output/iostream.format/output.streams/ostream.formatted/ostream.inserters.arithmetic/minus1.pass.cpp
Add static_cast<char> because toupper() returns int (C11 7.4.2.2/1).
test/std/iterators/stream.iterators/ostream.iterator/ostream.iterator.ops/assign_t.pass.cpp
This test is intentionally writing doubles to ostream_iterator<int>.
It's silencing -Wliteral-conversion for Clang, so I'm adding C4244 silencing for MSVC.
test/std/language.support/support.limits/limits/numeric.limits.members/infinity.pass.cpp
Given `extern float zero;`, the expression `1./zero` has type double, which emits a truncation warning
when being passed to test<float>() taking float. The fix is to say `1.f/zero` which has type float.
test/std/numerics/complex.number/cmplx.over/arg.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/complex.number/cmplx.over/norm.pass.cpp
These tests were constructing std::complex<double>(x, 0), emitting truncation warnings when x is long long.
Saying static_cast<double>(x) avoids this.
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.eng/rand.eng.lcong/seed_result_type.pass.cpp
This was using `int s` to construct and seed a linear_congruential_engine<T, stuff>, where T is
unsigned short/unsigned int/unsigned long/unsigned long long. That emits a truncation warning in the
unsigned short case. Because the range [0, 20) is tiny and we aren't doing anything else with the index,
we can just iterate with `T s`.
test/std/re/re.traits/value.pass.cpp
regex_traits<wchar_t>::value()'s first parameter is wchar_t (N4606 28.7 [re.traits]/13). This loop is
using int to iterate through ['g', 0xFFFF), emitting a truncation warning from int to wchar_t
(which is 16-bit for some of us). Because the bound is exclusive, we can just iterate with wchar_t.
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.cons/size_char_alloc.pass.cpp
This test is a little strange. It's trying to verify that basic_string's (InIt, InIt) range constructor
isn't confused by "N copies of C" when N and C have the same integral type. To do this, it was
testing (100, 65), but that eventually emits truncation warnings from int to char. There's a simple way
to avoid this - passing (static_cast<char>(100), static_cast<char>(65)) also exercises the disambiguation.
(And 100 is representable even when char has a signed range.)
test/std/strings/string.view/string.view.hash/string_view.pass.cpp
Add static_cast<char_type> because `'0' + i` has type int.
test/std/utilities/function.objects/bind/func.bind/func.bind.bind/nested.pass.cpp
What's more horrible than nested bind()? pow() overloads! This operator()(T a, T b) was assuming that
std::pow(a, b) can be returned as T. (In this case, T is int.) However, N4606 26.9.1 [cmath.syn]/2
says that pow(int, int) returns double, so this was truncating double to int.
Adding static_cast<T> silences this.
test/std/utilities/function.objects/unord.hash/integral.pass.cpp
This was iterating `for (int i = 0; i <= 5; ++i)` and constructing `T t(i);` but that's truncating
when T is short. (And super truncating when T is bool.) Adding static_cast<T> silences this.
test/std/utilities/utility/exchange/exchange.pass.cpp
First, this was exchanging 67.2 into an int, but that's inherently truncating.
Changing this to static_cast<short>(67) avoids the truncation while preserving the
"what if T and U are different" test coverage.
Second, this was exchanging {} with the explicit type float into an int, and that's also
inherently truncating. Specifying short is just as good.
test/std/utilities/utility/pairs/pairs.spec/make_pair.pass.cpp
Add static_cast<short>. Note that this affects template argument deduction for make_pair(),
better fulfilling the test's intent. For example, this was saying
`typedef std::pair<int, short> P1; P1 p1 = std::make_pair(3, 4);` but that was asking
make_pair() to return pair<int, int>, which was then being converted to pair<int, short>.
(pair's converting constructors are tested elsewhere.)
Now, std::make_pair(3, static_cast<short>(4)) actually returns pair<int, short>.
(There's still a conversion from pair<nullptr_t, short> to pair<unique_ptr<int>, short>.)
Fixes D27544.
llvm-svn: 289111
test/std/algorithms/alg.modifying.operations/alg.random.shuffle/random_shuffle_rand.pass.cpp
(Affects 64-bit architectures.) Include <cstddef> so we can take/return std::ptrdiff_t
(instead of int) in random_shuffle()'s RNG. (C++14 D.12 [depr.alg.random.shuffle]/2 says that
difference_type is used, and we're shuffling a plain array.)
test/std/algorithms/alg.sorting/alg.sort/sort/sort.pass.cpp
test/std/algorithms/alg.sorting/alg.sort/stable.sort/stable_sort.pass.cpp
(Affects 64-bit architectures.) Include <iterator> because we're already using iterator_traits.
Then, store the result of subtracting two RanIts as difference_type instead of long
(which truncates on LLP64 architectures like MSVC x64).
test/std/containers/sequences/forwardlist/forwardlist.ops/splice_after_flist.pass.cpp
test/std/containers/sequences/forwardlist/forwardlist.ops/splice_after_one.pass.cpp
(Affects 64-bit architectures.) Include <cstddef> so we can store the result of
subtracting two pointers as std::ptrdiff_t (instead of int).
test/std/input.output/iostream.format/input.streams/istream.unformatted/ignore_0xff.pass.cpp
(Affects 32-bit architectures.) Sometimes, size_t is too small. That's the case here,
where tellg() returns pos_type (N4606 27.7.2.3 [istream.unformatted]/39). Implementations can
have 64-bit pos_type (to handle large files) even when they have 32-bit size_t.
Fixes D27543.
llvm-svn: 289110
Instead of storing double in double and then truncating to int, store int in long
and then widen to long long. This preserves test coverage (as these tests are
interested in various tuple conversions) while avoiding truncation warnings.
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.tuple/tuple.cnstr/const_pair.pass.cpp
Since we aren't physically truncating anymore, t1 is equal to p0.
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.tuple/tuple.cnstr/convert_copy.pass.cpp
One edit is different from the usual pattern. Previously, we were storing
double in double and then converting to A, which has an implicitly converting
constructor from int. Now, we're storing int in int and then converting to A,
avoiding the truncation.
Fixes D27542.
llvm-svn: 289109
Change char to long and remove some char casts. This preserves test coverage for tuple's
heterogeneous comparisons, while avoiding int-to-char truncation warnings.
Fixes D27541.
llvm-svn: 289108
These tests for some guy's transparent operator functors were needlessly truncating their
double results to int. Preserving the doubleness makes compilers happier. I'm following
existing practice by adding an "// exact in binary" comment when the result isn't a whole number.
(The changes from 6 to 6.0 and so forth are stylistic, not critical.)
Fixes D27539.
llvm-svn: 289106
Given `std::basic_streambuf<CharT>::int_type __c`, `std::basic_string<CharT> str_`,
and having checked `__c != std::basic_streambuf<CharT>::traits_type::eof()` (substituting typedefs
for clarity), the line `str_.push_back(__c);` is safe according to humans, but truncates according
to compilers. `str_.push_back(static_cast<CharT>(__c));` avoids that problem.
Fixes D27538.
llvm-svn: 289105
test/std/containers/sequences/vector.bool/copy.pass.cpp
test/std/containers/sequences/vector.bool/copy_alloc.pass.cpp
test/std/containers/sequences/vector/vector.cons/copy.pass.cpp
test/std/containers/sequences/vector/vector.cons/copy_alloc.pass.cpp
Change "unsigned s = x.size();" to "typename C::size_type s = x.size();"
because that's what it returns.
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.cons/pointer_alloc.pass.cpp
Include <cstddef>, then change "unsigned n = T::length(s);"
to "std::size_t n = T::length(s);" because that's what char_traits returns.
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.cons/substr.pass.cpp
Change unsigned to typename S::size_type because that's what str.size() returns.
test/std/utilities/template.bitset/bitset.cons/ull_ctor.pass.cpp
This was needlessly truncating std::size_t to unsigned.
It's being used to compare and initialize std::size_t.
llvm-svn: 288753
Use static_cast<int> when storing size_t in int (or passing size_t to int).
Also, remove a spurious semicolon in test/support/archetypes.hpp.
test/support/count_new.hpp
Additionally, change data members (and parameters) to size_t.
llvm-svn: 288752
Replace "int n = str_.size();" with "int n = static_cast<int>(str_.size());".
int is the correct type to use, because we're eventually calling
"base::pbump(n+1);" where base is std::basic_streambuf.
N4606 27.6.3.3.3 [streambuf.put.area]/4 declares: "void pbump(int n);"
llvm-svn: 288751
Various changes:
test/std/algorithms/alg.sorting/alg.merge/inplace_merge.pass.cpp
This is comparing value_type to unsigned. value_type is sometimes int and sometimes struct S (implicitly constructible from int).
static_cast<value_type>(unsigned) silences the warning and doesn't do anything bad (as the values in question are small).
test/std/algorithms/alg.sorting/alg.nth.element/nth_element_comp.pass.cpp
This is comparing an int remote-element to size_t. The values in question are small and non-negative,
so either type is fine. I think that converting int to size_t is marginally better here than the reverse.
test/std/containers/sequences/deque/deque.cons/size.pass.cpp
DefaultOnly::count is int (and non-negative). When comparing to unsigned, use static_cast<unsigned>.
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.access/index.pass.cpp
We're comparing char to '0' through '9', but formed with the type size_t. Add static_cast<char>.
test/std/utilities/template.bitset/bitset.cons/ull_ctor.pass.cpp
Include <cstddef> for pedantic correctness (this test was already mentioning std::size_t).
"v[i] == (i & 1)" was comparing bool to size_t. Saying "v[i] == ((i & 1) != 0)" smashes the RHS to bool.
llvm-svn: 288749
Change "unsigned n = 0;" to "int n = 0;". It's being compared to int elements and ptrdiff_t distances.
test/std/containers/sequences/forwardlist/forwardlist.cons/move.pass.cpp
This one's a little special, but not really. "*i == n" is comparing MoveOnly to n.
MoveOnly is implicitly constructible from int, so int is the correct type to use here.
llvm-svn: 288748
Add static_cast<int>. In these cases, the values are guaranteed to be small-ish,
and they're being compared to int elements.
test/std/containers/sequences/deque/deque.capacity/access.pass.cpp
Use int instead of unsigned to iterate from 0 to 10.
llvm-svn: 288747
Add static_cast<std::size_t> to more comparisons. (Performed manually, unlike part 8/12.)
Also, include <cstddef> when it wasn't already being included.
llvm-svn: 288746
The Clang modules implementation breaks enough that libc++ needs an easy way
to enable/disable using modules on the Zorg builders. Editing Zorg itself
requires a buildmaster restart which only happens weekly. This patch
allows LIBCXX_USE_MODULES to be used to enable/disable the feature,
allowing the buildslave to disable it as need be.
llvm-svn: 288736
This patch overhalls the libc++ test format/configuration in order to fully support modules. By "fully support" I mean get almost all of the tests passing. The main hurdle for doing this is handling tests that `#define _LIBCPP_FOO` macros to test a different configuration. This patch deals with these tests in the following ways:
1. For tests that define single `_LIBCPP_ABI_FOO` macros have been annotated with `// MODULES_DEFINES: _LIBCPP_ABI_FOO`. This allows the test suite to define the macro on the command line so it uses a different set of modules.
2. Tests for libc++'s debug mode (which define custom `_LIBCPP_ASSERT`) are automatically detected by the test suite and are compiled and run with modules disabled.
This patch also cleans up how the `CXXCompiler` helper class handles enabling/disabling language features.
NOTE: This patch uses `LIT` features which were only committed to LLVM today. If this patch breaks running the libc++ tests you probably need to update LLVM.
llvm-svn: 288728
Under libcpp-no-exceptions, noexcept is trivially true. Some tests expect in
the usual setting to return false, so adjust them to expect true under
libcpp-no-exceptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27310
llvm-svn: 288660
Replace throw with TEST_THROW and protect tests that do throw. Also add missing assert(false).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27252
llvm-svn: 288383
When initializing unsigned integers to their maximum values, change "const T M(~0);" to "const T M(static_cast<T>(-1));".
~0 and -1 are equivalent, but I consider the -1 form to be significantly clearer (and more consistent with other tests).
llvm-svn: 287827
Various changes:
test/std/algorithms/alg.sorting/alg.binary.search/binary.search/binary_search.pass.cpp
Change M from unsigned to int. It's compared against "int x",
and we binary_search() for it within a vector<int>.
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.dis/rand.dist.norm/rand.dist.norm.f/eval.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.dis/rand.dist.norm/rand.dist.norm.f/eval_param.pass.cpp
Add static_cast<unsigned> when comparing int to unsigned.
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.cons/size_char_alloc.pass.cpp
Change unsigned indices to int when we're being given int as a bound.
llvm-svn: 287825
Summary: The `max_size()` method of containers should respect both the allocator's reported `max_size` and the range of the `difference_type`. This patch makes all containers choose the smallest of those two values.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26885
llvm-svn: 287729
Summary:
Because `locale.h` isn't part of the libc++ modules the class definitions it provides are exported as part of `__locale` (since it happens to be build first). This breaks `<clocale>` which exports `std::lconv` without including `<__locale>`.
This patch implements `locale.h` to fix this issue, it also adds support for testing libc++ with modules.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26826
llvm-svn: 287413
In C++11 mode and newer, use real static_asserts.
In C++03 mode, min() and max() aren't constexpr, so use plain asserts.
One test triggers MSVC's warning C4310 "cast truncates constant value".
The code is valid, and yet the warning is valid, so I'm silencing it
through push-disable-pop.
llvm-svn: 287391
sample() isn't specified with a reproducible algorithm, so expecting
exact output is non-Standard. Mark those tests with LIBCPP_ASSERT.
In test_small_population(), we're guaranteed to get all of the elements,
but not necessarily in their original order. When PopulationCategory is
forward, we're guaranteed stability (and can therefore test equal()).
Otherwise, we can only test is_permutation(). (As it happens, both libcxx
and MSVC's STL provide stability in this scenario for input-only iterators.)
llvm-svn: 287383
The Standard doesn't provide any guarantees beyond "valid but unspecified" for
moved-from std::functions. libcxx moves from small targets and leaves them
there, while MSVC's STL empties out the source. Mark these assertions as
libcxx-specific.
llvm-svn: 287382
N4582 17.6.3.5 [allocator.requirements] says that allocators are given
cv-unqualified object types, and N4582 20.9.9 [default.allocator]
implies that allocator<const T> is ill-formed (due to colliding
address() overloads). Therefore, tests for allocator<const T>
should be marked as libcxx-specific (if not removed outright).
llvm-svn: 287381
This fails with gcc because __builtin_isnan and friends, which
libcpp_isnan and friends call, are not themselves constexpr-evaluatable.
llvm-svn: 287041
Summary:
This makes these functions available on host and device, which is
necessary to compile <complex> for the device.
Reviewers: hfinkel, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25403
llvm-svn: 287012
With a max_load_factor of 1.0, the only guarantee is that
bucket_count() >= size(). (Note: setting max_load_factor without
rehashing isn't supposed to affect this, because setting
max_load_factor is currently specified to be constant time.)
llvm-svn: 286982
test/std/depr/depr.c.headers/inttypes_h.pass.cpp
test/std/input.output/file.streams/c.files/cinttypes.pass.cpp
test/std/input.output/iostream.forward/iosfwd.pass.cpp
Add test() to avoid a bunch of void-casts, although we still need a few.
test/std/input.output/iostream.format/quoted.manip/quoted.pass.cpp
skippingws was unused (it's unclear to me whether this was mistakenly copy-pasted from round_trip() below).
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.collate/locale.collate/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/facet.ctype.special/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/locale.codecvt/types_char.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/locale.codecvt/types_wchar_t.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/locale.ctype/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/facet.numpunct/locale.numpunct/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locales/locale.global.templates/use_facet.pass.cpp
When retrieving facets, the references are unused.
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.numeric/locale.nm.put/facet.num.put.members/put_long.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.numeric/locale.nm.put/facet.num.put.members/put_unsigned_long.pass.cpp
"std::ios_base::iostate err = ios.goodbit;" was completely unused here.
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.time/locale.time.get/time_base.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/c.math/ctgmath.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.device/entropy.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.device/eval.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.modifiers/string_copy/copy.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char16_t/eof.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char32_t/eof.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/futures/futures.promise/dtor.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/futures/futures.task/futures.task.members/dtor.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/thread.condition/thread.condition.condvar/wait_for_pred.pass.cpp
These variables are verifying types but are otherwise unused.
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.capacity/reserve.pass.cpp
old_cap was unused (it's unclear to me whether it was intended to be used).
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char16_t/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char16_t/lt.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char32_t/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char32_t/lt.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.wchar.t/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.wchar.t/lt.pass.cpp
These tests contained unused characters.
llvm-svn: 286847
Skip tests that expect an exception be thrown. Also add
some missing asserts in the original test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26512
llvm-svn: 286823
Bitset tests feature a sequence of tests of increasing bitset sizes,
but these tests rely on exceptions when the bitset size is less than
50 elements.
This change adds a flag to tell whether a test should throw. If it must
throw it will be skipped under no-exceptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26140
llvm-svn: 286474
In these tests there are some paths that explicitly throw, so use
the TEST_THROW macro that was proposed for this and then skip the tests
that may enter the throwing path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26142
llvm-svn: 286099
This replaces every occurrence of _LIBCPP_STD_VER in the tests with
TEST_STD_VER. Additionally, for every affected
file, #include "test_macros.h" is being added explicitly if it wasn't
already there.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26294
llvm-svn: 286007
Skip the tests that expect an exception be thrown and protect unreachable catch blocks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26197
llvm-svn: 285791
Previously __libcpp_is_constructible checked the validity of reference
construction using 'eat<To>(declval<From>())' but this doesn't consider
From's explicit conversion operators. This patch teaches __libcpp_is_constructible
how to handle these cases. To do this we need to check the validity
using 'static_cast<To>(declval<From>())'. Unfortunately static_cast allows
additional base-to-derived and lvalue-to-rvalue conversions, which have to be
checked for and manually rejected.
While implementing these changes I discovered that Clang incorrectly
rejects `static_cast<int&&>(declval<float&>())` even though
`int &&X(declval<float&>())` is well formed. In order to tolerate this bug
the `__eat<T>(...)` needs to be left in-place. Otherwise it could be replaced
entirely with the new static_cast implementation.
Thanks to Walter Brown for providing the test cases.
llvm-svn: 285786
These tests are of the form
try {
action-that-may-throw
assert(!exceptional-condition)
assert(some-other-facts)
} catch (relevant-exception) {
assert(exceptional-condition)
}
Under libcpp-no-exceptions there is still value in verifying
some-other-facts while avoiding the exceptional case. So for these tests
just conditionally check some-other-facts if exceptional-condition is
false. When exception are supported make sure that a true
exceptional-condition throws an exception
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26136
llvm-svn: 285697
Under -fno-exceptions TEST_THROW becomes abort / __builtin_abort which returns
void. This causes a type mismatch in the conditional operator when testing the
library in C++98,03,11 modes.
Use a comma operator to workaround this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26147
llvm-svn: 285572
This is a follow up of D24562.
These tests do not check anything but exceptions, so it makes sense to mark
them as UNSUPPORTED under a library built without exceptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26075
llvm-svn: 285550
This prevent the symbols from being both externally available and hidden, which
causes them to be linked incorrectly. This is only a problem when the address
of the function is explicitly taken since it will always be inlined otherwise.
This patch fixes the issues that caused r285456 to be reverted, and can
now be reapplied.
llvm-svn: 285531
This patch entirely rewrites the parsing logic for paths. Unlike the previous
implementation this one stores information about the current state; For example
if we are in a trailing separator or a root separator. This avoids the need for
extra lookahead (and extra work) when incrementing or decrementing an iterator.
Roughly this gives us a 15% speedup over the previous implementation.
Unfortunately this implementation is still a lot slower than libstdc++'s.
Because libstdc++ pre-parses and splits the path upon construction their
iterators are trivial to increment/decrement. This makes libc++ lazy parsing
100x slower than libstdc++. However the pre-parsing libstdc++ causes a ton
of extra and unneeded allocations when constructing the string. For example
`path("/foo/bar/")` would require at least 5 allocations with libstdc++
whereas libc++ uses only one. The non-allocating behavior is much preferable
when you consider filesystem usages like 'exists("/foo/bar/")'.
Even then libc++'s path seems to be twice as slow to simply construct compared
to libstdc++. More investigation is needed about this.
llvm-svn: 285526
This patch does two seperate things. First it adds a file called
"__libcpp_version" which only contains the current libc++ version
(currently 4000). This file is not intended for use as a header. This file
is used by Clang in order to easily determine the installed libc++ version.
This allows Clang to enable/disable certain language features only when the
library supports them.
The second change is the addition of _LIBCPP_LIBRARY_VERSION macro, which
returns the version of the installed dylib since it may be different than
the headers.
llvm-svn: 285382
Summary:
Fixes PR19851.
alg.re.match/ecma.pass.cpp still XFAILS on linux, but after commenting out
locale-related tests, it passes. I don't have a freebsd machine to produce a
full pass.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26026
llvm-svn: 285352
Fixes MS issues 63, 64, and 65.
test/std/utilities/any/any.class/any.cons/move.pass.cpp:
* "Moves are always destructive" is not a portable assumption; check with LIBCPP_ASSERT.
test/std/utilities/any/any.class/any.cons/value.pass.cpp:
* The standard does not forbid initializing std::any from any pointer-to-function type. Remove the non-conforming "DecayTag" test.
test/std/utilities/any/any.class/any.modifiers/swap.pass.cpp:
* Self-swap is not specified to perform no moves; check with LIBCPP_ASSERT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26007
llvm-svn: 285234
Summary:
This patch implements the library side of P0035R4. The implementation is thanks to @rsmith.
In addition to the C++17 implementation, the library implementation can be explicitly turned on using `-faligned-allocation` in all dialects.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith
Subscribers: rsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25591
llvm-svn: 284206
Summary:
On FreeBSD, for ABI compatibility reasons, the pair trivial copy
constructor is disabled, using the aptly-named
`_LIBCPP_DEPRECATED_ABI_DISABLE_PAIR_TRIVIAL_COPY_CTOR` define.
Disable the related tests when this define is on, so they don't fail
unexpectedly.
Reviewers: emaste, rsmith, theraven, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25449
llvm-svn: 284047
Summary:
Adapt implementation of Library Fundamentals TS optional into an implementation of N4606 optional.
- Update relational operators per http://wg21.link/P0307
- Update to requirements of http://wg21.link/P0032
- Extension: Implement trivial copy/move construction/assignment for `optional<T>` when `T` is trivially copyable.
Audit P/Rs for optional LWG issues:
- 2756 "C++ WP optional<T> should 'forward' T's implicit conversions" Implemented, which also resolves 2753 "Optional's constructors and assignments need constraints" (modulo my refusal to explicitly delete the move operations, which is a design error that I'm working on correcting in the 2756 P/R).
- 2736 "nullopt_t insufficiently constrained" Already conforming. I've added a test ensuring that `nullopt_t` is not copy-initializable from an empty braced-init-list, which I believe is the root intent of the issue, to avoid regression.
- 2740 "constexpr optional<T>::operator->" Already conforming.
- 2746 "Inconsistency between requirements for emplace between optional and variant" No P/R, but note that the author's '"suggested resolution" is already implemented.
- 2748 "swappable traits for optionals" Already conforming.
- 2753 "Optional's constructors and assignments need constraints" Implemented.
Most of the work for this patch was done by Casey Carter @ Microsoft. Thank you Casey!
Reviewers: mclow.lists, CaseyCarter, EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22741
llvm-svn: 283980
This patch is largely thanks to Casey Carter @ Microsoft. He did the initial
work of porting our experimental implementation and tests over to namespace
std.
llvm-svn: 283977