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
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
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
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
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
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 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
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
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
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
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 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
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
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
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
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
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
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 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