When the new libc++ test format was enabled, warnings were accidentally
dropped cause they were not part of the %{compile_flags} substitution.
This commit adds them back, however `-Werror` is only used for non-verify
tests (cause it doesn't make sense for verify tests).
Marked unsupported for C++03 and C++11 since this test uses alias
declarations, and at least one C++03 bot was failing with
-Wc++11-extensions.
Change-Id: I8c3a579edd7eb83e0bc74e85d116b68f22400161
Avoid using <sys/types.h> in those tests so that we can run them on
non-AIX systems (otherwise this test is basically dead-code on all
the build bots I'm aware of). Also, split up the test to allow using
.compile.pass.cpp tests instead of .sh.cpp tests, since that is the
last test referencing the %{compile} substitution explicitly.
Instead of being ShTests that use clang-verify (and without the proper
REQUIRES annotation), create .verify.cpp tests instead with the right
REQUIRES annotation.
By renaming .fail.cpp tests that don't need clang-verify to .compile.fail.cpp,
the new test format will not try to compile these tests with clang-verify,
and the old test format will work just the same. However, this allows
removing a workaround that requires parsing each test looking for
clang-verify markup.
After this change, a .fail.cpp test should always have clang-verify markup.
When clang-verify is not supported by the compiler, we will just check that
these tests fail to compile. When clang-verify is supported, these tests
will be compiled with clang-verify whether they have markup or not (so
they should have markup, or they will fail).
This simplifies the test suite and also ensures that all of our .fail.cpp
tests provide clang-verify markup. If it's impossible for a test to have
clang-verify markup, it can be moved to a .compile.fail.cpp test, which
are unconditionally just checked for compilation failure.
The libc++ test suite currently defines several features that are not
used anywhere in the tests, or that are redundant with other features.
For the purpose of simplifying config.py and to ease the bring up of a
new configuration, this commit removes some of these features:
- rename dylib-has-no-filesystem to c++filesystem-disabled, which exists
- rename apple-darwin to just darwin, which is already set
- remove useless setting of libstdc++, which is already set correctly
- remove libcpp-abi-unstable, which is not used anywhere
- remove the glibc-XXX features, which are not used anywhere
The libc++ test suite has a lot of old Lit features used to XFAIL tests
and mark them as UNSUPPORTED. Many of them are to workaround problems on
old compilers or old platforms. As time goes by, it is good to go and
clean those up to simplify the configuration of the test suite, and also
to reflect the testing reality. It's not useful to have markup that gives
the impression that e.g. clang-3.3 is supported, when we don't really
test on it anymore (and hence several new tests probably don't have the
necessary markup on them).
Patch from Christopher Di Bella (cjdb@google.com)
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D74291
Adds `std::same_as` to libc++. Since there aren't clang-format rules for
//requires-expressions//, I'll need to disable the formatter in certain areas.
Broke builders that emit different diagnostics. e.g.:
error: 'warning' diagnostics seen but not expected:
Line 13: alias declarations are a C++11 extension
Line 20: alias declarations are a C++11 extension
This reverts commit ff87813715.
This allows both the old and the new testing formats to handle these
tests with modules enabled.
We also include the modules flags in the %{flags} substitution, which
means that .sh.cpp tests in the old format and all tests in the new
format will use modules flags when enabled.
We had a workaround because GCC 5 does not evaluate static assertions
that are dependent on template parameters. This commit removes the
workaround and marks the corresponding tests as unsupported with GCC 5.
This has the benefit of bringing the new and the old test formats closer
without having to carry a workaround for an old compiler in the new
test format.
Always depend on the compiler to have a correct implementation of
max_align_t in stddef.h and don't provide a fallback. For pre-C++11,
require __STDCPP_NEW_ALIGNMENT__ in <new> as provided by clang in all
standard modes. Adjust test cases to avoid testing or using max_align_t
in pre-C++11 mode and also to better deal with alignof(max_align_t)>16.
Document requirements of the alignment tests around natural alignment of
power-of-two-sized types.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73245
The testing script used to test libc++ historically did not like directories
without any testing files, so these tests had been added. Since this is
not necessary anymore, we can now remove these files. This has the benefit
that the total number of tests reflects the real number of tests more
closely, and we also skip some unnecessary work (especially relevant when
running tests over SSH).
However, some nothing_to_do.pass.cpp tests actually serve the purpose of
documenting that an area of the Standard doesn't need to be tested, or is
tested elsewhere. These files are not removed by this commit.
Removal done with:
import os
import itertools
for (dirpath, dirnames, filenames) in itertools.chain(os.walk('./libcxx/test'),
os.walk('./libcxxabi/test')):
if len(filenames + dirnames) > 1 and \
any(p == 'nothing_to_do.pass.cpp' for p in filenames):
os.remove(os.path.join(dirpath, 'nothing_to_do.pass.cpp'))
Instead of hardcoding absolute paths on the build-host in the executables,
use relative paths from the current working directory. Also, use
FILE_DEPENDENCIES to mark the static test env as being required by
the relevant tests.
Given a SSH executor that copies the files to the remote host properly,
the tests can be run on that remote host.
This patch reimplements the dynamic filesystem helper using Posix
functionality instead of relying on Python. The primary reason for
doing this is that it allows running the libc++ test suite on devices
that do not have Python.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77140
Using the ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS annotation, it is possible to move
these tests from .sh.cpp to .pass.cpp, making them suitable for running
on remote hosts more easily.
Otherwise, trying to reproduce a failing filesystem test by copy-pasting
the command-line used and running that in the shell won't work, because
the shell will eat quoting around the define and we'll end up with a
non-stringized path in the .cpp file.
That way, local lit configuration files don't have to worry about
deep-copying the compiler instance of the test format, which is
arguably an implementation detail.
We pass the config to this method even though it is not used by the
current test format because this allows replacing the current test
format by other test formats that would require the config to add
new compile flags.
This reduces the complexity of our already complex global lit configuration,
and also avoids cluttering the compilation commands for all tests with
things that are only relevant to the filesystem tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76785
lit is not very clever when it performs substitution on RUN lines. It
simply looks for a match anywhere in the line (without tokenization)
and replaces it by the expansion. This means that a RUN line containing
e.g. `-verify-ignore-unexpected=note` wouod be expanded to
`-verify-ignore-unexpected=<substitution for not>e`, which is
surprising and nonsensical.
It also means that something like `%compile_module` could be expanded
to `<substitution-for-%compile>_module` or to the correct substitution,
depending on the order in which substitutions are evaluated by lit.
To avoid such problems, it is a good habit to delimit custom substitutions
with some token. This commit does that for all substitutions used in the
libc++ and libc++abi test suites.
Forcing -Werror and other warnings means that the test suite isn't
actually testing what most people are seeing in their code -- it seems
better and less arbitrary to compile these tests as close as possible
to the compiler default instead.
Removing -Werror also means that we get to differentiate between
diagnostics that are errors and those that are warnings, which makes
the test suite more precise.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76311
Some tests do not fail at all when -verify is not supported, unless some
arbitrary warning flag is added to make them fail. We currently used
-Werror=unused-result to make them fail, but doing so makes the test
suite a lot more inscrutable. It seems better to just disable those
tests when -verify is not supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76256
It's hard to imagine someone using a recent version of libc++ with a
roughly 3 years old Clang. Since we're not testing libc++ with Clang 3.5
anyway, claiming support for it is somewhat of a lie.
Note that we don't test Clang 4 either, however I have no reason to bump
the requirement beyond Clang 4 at the moment, whereas removing Clang 3.5
allows simplifying the test suite.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76618
This patch updates <type_traits> to use builtin type traits whenever
possible to improve compile times.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67900
The current implementation of binomial_distribution is not guaranteed to
converge for certain extreme configurations of the engine and distribution.
This is due to a mistake in the implementation of the algorithm from the
given reference paper. The algorithm in the paper is guaranteed to
terminate but has redundant statements. The current implementation
simplified away the redundancy into a while loop, but it excludes the
return condition of the case where a good sample cannot be returned for
the particular sample being used from the uniform distribution, which is
what causes the infinite loop. This change guarantees termination by
recognizing that a good sample cannot be returned and returning 0 after
breaking the loop. This is also in contrast to the paper because the
return value as specified in the paper violates basic checks in at least
a subset of the extreme cases where the current implementation fails to
terminate. This default return value of 0 is satisfactory for the
extreme case known so far.
Since this is only meant to affect extreme cases where the algorithm
does not terminate anyways, the behavior is expected to remain exactly
the same for all non-extreme cases that have been terminating so far.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR44847
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74997
Summary:
Android's libc uses new/delete internally and these are counted, so
the counter needs to be reset to zero at the start of the test.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, #libc, ldionne
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Subscribers: dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76091
Summary: The return type modification has already been implemented in rL364840 and rL365290.
Reviewers: ldionne, mclow.lists, EricWF, #libc!
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70275
The goal of the test was only to check that we could access the
`this->current` member of std::reverse_iterator from a derived
class, but in doing so we incremented a null iterator, which is UB.
These tests check that an operations happens within a specified
deadline, which causes flaky failures on slow machines or machines
under heavy load.
By adding the // FLAKY_TEST. tag it allows the test suite to
retry or ignore the tests
- Avoid using C++11-and-later features in <atomic>:
Historically, we've supported <atomic> in C++03, so we can't use C++11
features in that header. This is something we really need to change,
since our implementation of <atomic> is starting to accumulate technical
debt because of that.
- Mark a test as unsupported on single threaded systems
- Add missing symbols to the Linux ABI list
- Add the new symbols to the ABI list on Darwin
- Add XFAIL markup to the tests that require dylib support on older platforms
- Add availability markup for back-deployment
This patch enables throwing exceptions for invalid backreferences
in the constructor when using the basic, extended, grep, or egrep grammar.
This fixes bug 34297.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62453
This patch qualifies calls to ref and cref inside ref(reference_wrapper<T>)
and cref(reference_wrapper<T>), respectively. These previously unqualified
calls could break in the presence of user functions called ref/cref inside
associated namespaces: https://gcc.godbolt.org/z/8VfprT
Fixes PR44398.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74287
The regex backreferences were not properly parsed and used when using
the extended grammar. This change parses them. The issue was found while
working on PR34297.
Thanks to Mark de Wever for the patch!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62451
There are some unnecessary typenames in std/numerics/c.math/abs.pass.cpp;
e.g. they're not in a dependent context.
Patch by Bryce Adelstein Lelbach
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72106
The static asserts in span<T, N>::front() and span<T, N>::back() are
incorrect as they may be triggered from valid code due to evaluation
of a never taken branch:
span<int, 0> foo;
if (!foo.empty()) {
auto x = foo.front();
}
The problem is that the branch is always evaluated by the compiler,
creating invalid compile errors for span<T, 0>.
Thanks to Michael Schellenberger Costa for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71995
The calculation _Offset + _Count <= size() may overflow, so use
_Count <= size() - _Offset instead. Note that this is safe due to
the previous constraint that _Offset <= size().
Patch by Michael Schellenberger Costa.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71998
Summary:
In `std::filesystem::proximate` tests we assume that the current working directory's name
is `fs.op.proximate`. This is fine when we're running the tests locally.
However, if we're running those tests on a remote machine via SSH, the directory layout may be
different. For example, currently we copy each test executable individually into
a temporary directory on the target board using SCP, so the assumption about the working directory name
doesn't necessarily hold.
This patch is the only thing that is necessary for all libc++ tests to pass when run remotely.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: ldionne, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74348
clang 9ce6dc9872 drops support for
implicit conversion of nullptr_t to bool. From that commit:
The C++ rules briefly allowed this, but the rule changed nearly 10
years ago and we never updated our implementation to match. However,
we've warned on this by default for a long time, and no other compiler
accepts (even as an extension).
The extent of the returned span was always std::dynamic_extent, which
is incorrect.
Thanks to Michael Schellenberger Costa for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71997
Both methods have compile time constraints that we should test against.
Patch by Michael Schellenberger Costa
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71999
Summary:
This patch implements https://wg21.link/P0325.
Please mind that at it is my first contribution to libc++, so I may have forgotten to abide to some conventions.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, ldionne, lichray
Reviewed By: ldionne, lichray
Subscribers: lichray, dexonsmith, zoecarver, christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69882
span.cons/container.pass.cpp
N4842 22.7.3.2 [span.cons]/13 constrains span's range constructor
for ranges::contiguous_range (among other criteria).
24.4.5 [range.refinements]/2 says that contiguous_range requires data(),
and (via contiguous_range, random_access_range, bidirectional_range,
forward_range, input_range, range) it also requires begin() and end()
(see 24.4.2 [range.range]/1).
Therefore, IsAContainer needs to provide begin() and end().
(Detected by MSVC's concept-constrained implementation.)
span.cons/stdarray.pass.cpp
This test uses std::array, so it must include <array>.
<span> isn't guaranteed to drag in <array>.
(Detected by MSVC's implementation which uses a forward declaration to
avoid dragging in <array>, for increased compiler throughput.)
span.objectrep/as_bytes.pass.cpp
span.objectrep/as_writable_bytes.pass.cpp
Testing `sp.extent == std::dynamic_extent` triggers MSVC warning
C4127 "conditional expression is constant". Using `if constexpr` is a
simple way to avoid this without disrupting anyone else (as span
requires C++20 mode).
span.tuple/get.pass.cpp
22.7.3.2 [span.cons]/4.3: "Preconditions: If extent is not equal to
dynamic_extent, then count is equal to extent."
These lines were triggering undefined behavior (detected by assertions
in MSVC's implementation).
I changed the count arguments in the first two chunks, followed by
changing the span extents, in order to preserve the test's coverage
and follow the existing pattern.
span.cons/span.pass.cpp
22.7.3.2 [span.cons]/18.1 constrains span's converting constructor with
"Extent == dynamic_extent || Extent == OtherExtent is true".
This means that converting from dynamic extent to static extent is
not allowed. (Other constructors tested elsewhere, like
span(It first, size_type count), can be used to write such code.)
As this is the test for the converting constructor, I have:
* Removed the "dynamic -> static" case from checkCV(), which is
comprehensive.
* Changed the initialization of std::span<T, 0> s1{}; in
testConstexprSpan() and testRuntimeSpan(), because s1 is used below.
* Removed ASSERT_NOEXCEPT(std::span<T, 0>{s0}); from those functions,
as they are otherwise comprehensive.
* Deleted testConversionSpan() entirely. Note that this could never
compile (it had a bool return type, but forgot to say `return`). And it
couldn't have provided useful coverage, as the /18.2 constraint
"OtherElementType(*)[] is convertible to ElementType(*)[]"
permits only cv-qualifications, which are already tested by checkCV().
libcxx/test/std/containers/sequences/array/at.pass.cpp
Need to include <stdexcept> for std::out_of_range.
libcxx/test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.time/*
Need to include <ios> for std::ios.
[libcxx] [test] Calling min and max on an empty valarray is UB.
libcxx/test/std/numerics/numarray/template.valarray/valarray.members/min.pass.cpp
libcxx/test/std/numerics/numarray/template.valarray/valarray.members/max.pass.cpp
The calls `v1.min();` and `v1.max();` were emitting nodiscard warnings
with MSVC's STL. Upon closer inspection, these calls were triggering
undefined behavior. N4842 [valarray.members] says:
"T min() const;
8 Preconditions: size() > 0 is true.
T max() const;
10 Preconditions: size() > 0 is true."
As these tests already provide coverage for non-empty valarrays
(immediately above), I've simply deleted the code for empty valarrays.
[libcxx] [test] Add macros to msvc_stdlib_force_include.h (NFC).
libcxx/test/support/msvc_stdlib_force_include.h
These macros are being used by:
libcxx/test/std/utilities/meta/meta.trans/meta.trans.other/result_of11.pass.cpp
Defining them to nothing allows that test to pass.
[libcxx] [test] Silence MSVC warning C5063 for is_constant_evaluated (NFC).
libcxx/test/std/utilities/meta/meta.const.eval/is_constant_evaluated.pass.cpp
This test is intentionally writing code that MSVC intentionally warns
about, so the warning should be silenced.
Additionally, comment an endif for clarity.
[libcxx] [test] Silence MSVC warning C4127 (NFC).
libcxx/test/support/charconv_test_helpers.h
MSVC avoids emitting this warning when it sees a single constexpr value
being tested, but this condition is a mix of compile-time and run-time.
Using push-disable-pop is the least intrusive way to silence this.
[libcxx] [test] Silence MSVC truncation warning (NFC).
libcxx/test/std/containers/sequences/vector/vector.cons/construct_iter_iter.pass.cpp
This test is intentionally truncating float to int, which MSVC
intentionally warns about, so push-disable-pop is necessary.
[libcxx] [test] Avoid truncation warnings in erase_if tests (NFC).
libcxx/test/std/containers/associative/map/map.erasure/erase_if.pass.cpp
libcxx/test/std/containers/associative/multimap/multimap.erasure/erase_if.pass.cpp
libcxx/test/std/containers/unord/unord.map/erase_if.pass.cpp
libcxx/test/std/containers/unord/unord.multimap/erase_if.pass.cpp
These tests use maps with `short` keys and values, emitting MSVC
truncation warnings from `int`. Adding `static_cast` to `key_type`
and `mapped_type` avoids these warnings.
As these tests require C++20 mode (or newer), for brevity I've changed
the multimap tests to use emplace to initialize the test data.
This has no effect on the erase_if testing.
Too many warnings are being disabled too quickly. Warnings are
important to keeping libc++ correct. This patch re-enables two
warnings: -Wconstant-evaluated and -Wdeprecated-copy.
In future, all warnings disabled for the test suite should require
an attached bug. The bug should state the plan for re-enabling that
warning, or a strong case why it should remain disabled.
Summary:
Android added quick_exit()/at_quick_exit() in API level 21,
aligned_alloc() in API level 28, and timespec_get() in API level 29,
but has the other C11 features at all API levels (since they're basically
just coming from clang directly).
_LIBCPP_HAS_QUICK_EXIT and _LIBCPP_HAS_TIMESPEC_GET already existed,
so we can reuse them. (And use _LIBCPP_HAS_TIMESPEC_GET in a few more
places where _LIBCPP_HAS_C11_FEATURES has been used as a proxy. This
isn't correct for Android.)
_LIBCPP_HAS_ALIGNED_ALLOC is added, to cover aligned_alloc() (obviously).
Add a missing std:: before aligned_alloc in a cstdlib test, and remove a
couple of !defined(_WIN32)s now that we're explicitly testing
TEST_HAS_ALIGNED_ALLOC rather than TEST_HAS_C11_FEATURES.
Reviewers: danalbert, EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: danalbert
Subscribers: srhines, christof, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69929
PR13592 was caused by a problem in how to compiler implemented the
__is_convertible_to intrinsic. That problem, reported as PR13591,
was fixed back in 2012. We don't support such old versions of Clang
anyway, so we don't need the library workaround that had been added
to solve PR13592 (while waiting for the compiler fix).
Summary: The implementation of P1152R4 in Clang has resulted in some deprecation warnings appearing in the libc++ and libc++abi test suite. Fix or suppress these warnings.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68879
llvm-svn: 375307
* Add the conventional `return 0` to `main` in `variant.assign/conv.pass.cpp` and `variant.ctor/conv.pass.cpp`
* Fix some MSVC signed-to-unsigned conversion warnings by replacing `int` literarls with `unsigned int` literals
llvm-svn: 374723
`make_optional<string>(4, 'X')` passes `4` (an `int`) as the first argument to `string`'s `(size_t, charT)` constructor, triggering a signed/unsigned mismatch warning when compiling with MSVC at `/W4`. The incredibly simple fix is to instead use an unsigned literal (`4u`).
llvm-svn: 374684
* Silence unused-local-typedef warnings: `map.cons/assign_initializer_list.pass.cpp` (and the `set.cons` variant) uses a local typedef only within `LIBCPP_ASSERT`s, so clang diagnoses it as unused when testing non-libc++.
* Add missing include: `c.math/abs.pass.cpp` uses `std::numeric_limits` but failed to `#include <limits>`.
* Don't test non-type: A "recent" change to `meta.trans.other/underlying_type.pass.cpp` unconditionally tests the type `F` which is conditionally defined.
* Use `hash<long long>` instead of `hash<short>` with `int` in `unordered_meow` deduction guide tests to avoid truncation warnings.
* Convert `3.14` explicitly in `midpoint.float.pass` since MSVC incorrectly diagnoses `float meow = 3.14;` as truncating.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68681
llvm-svn: 374248
Summary:
LWG 3158 marks the allocator_arg_t constructor of std::tuple as
conditionnally explicit based on whether the default constructors
of the tuple's members are explicitly default constructible.
This was previously committed as r372778 and reverted in r372832 due to
the commit breaking LLVM's build in C++14 mode. This issue has now been
addressed.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65232
llvm-svn: 373092
Summary:
LWG2510 makes tag types like allocator_arg_t explicitly default
constructible instead of implicitly default constructible. It also
makes the constructors for std::pair and std::tuple conditionally
explicit based on the explicit-ness of the default constructibility
for the pair/tuple's elements.
This was previously committed as r372777 and reverted in r372832 due to
the commit breaking LLVM's build in C++14 mode. This issue has now been
addressed.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65161
llvm-svn: 372983
Users should only get the assert() macros if they explicitly include
them.
Found after switching from the GNU C++ stdlib to the LLVM C++ stdlib.
llvm-svn: 372963
We don't support GCC 4 and older according to the documentation, so
we should pretend it doesn't exist.
This is a re-application of r372787.
llvm-svn: 372916
This declaration was previously missing despite appearing in the
synopsis. Users are still required to include <ostream> to get the
definition of the streaming operator.
llvm-svn: 372909
This also reverts:
- r372778: [libc++] Implement LWG 3158
- r372782: [libc++] Try fixing tests that fail on GCC 5 and older
- r372787: Purge mentions of GCC 4 from the test suite
Reason: the change breaks compilation of LLVM with libc++, for details see
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/libcxx-dev/2019-September/000599.html
llvm-svn: 372832
Summary: As suggested by @ldionne in D66178, this patch removes C++03 variadics //only//. Following patches will apply more updates.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, ldionne
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67675
llvm-svn: 372780
Summary:
LWG 3158 marks the allocator_arg_t constructor of std::tuple as
conditionnally explicit based on whether the default constructors
of the tuple's members are explicitly default constructible.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65232
llvm-svn: 372778
Summary:
LWG2510 makes tag types like allocator_arg_t explicitly default
constructible instead of implicitly default constructible. It also
makes the constructors for std::pair and std::tuple conditionally
explicit based on the explicit-ness of the default constructibility
for the pair/tuple's elements.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65161
llvm-svn: 372777
std::condition_variable is currently implemented via
pthread_cond_timedwait() on systems that use pthread. This is
problematic, since that function waits by default on CLOCK_REALTIME
and libc++ does not provide any mechanism to change from this
default.
Due to this, regardless of if condition_variable::wait_until() is
called with a chrono::system_clock or chrono::steady_clock parameter,
condition_variable::wait_until() will wait using CLOCK_REALTIME. This
is not accurate to the C++ standard as calling
condition_variable::wait_until() with a chrono::steady_clock parameter
should use CLOCK_MONOTONIC.
This is particularly problematic because CLOCK_REALTIME is a bad
choice as it is subject to discontinuous time adjustments, that may
cause condition_variable::wait_until() to immediately timeout or wait
indefinitely.
This change fixes this issue with a new POSIX function,
pthread_cond_clockwait() proposed on
http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=1216. The new function is
similar to pthread_cond_timedwait() with the addition of a clock
parameter that allows it to wait using either CLOCK_REALTIME or
CLOCK_MONOTONIC, thus allowing condition_variable::wait_until() to
wait using CLOCK_REALTIME for chrono::system_clock and CLOCK_MONOTONIC
for chrono::steady_clock.
pthread_cond_clockwait() is implemented in glibc (2.30 and later) and
Android's bionic (Android API version 30 and later).
This change additionally makes wait_for() and wait_until() with clocks
other than chrono::system_clock use CLOCK_MONOTONIC.<Paste>
llvm-svn: 372016
exceptions are disabled.
The patch was reverted due to some confusion about non-movable types. ie
types
that explicitly delete their move constructors. However, such types do
not meet
the requirement for `MoveConstructible`, which is required by
`std::vector`:
Summary:
`std::vector<T>` is free choose between using copy or move operations
when it
needs to resize. The standard only candidates that the correct exception
safety
guarantees are provided. When exceptions are disabled these guarantees
are
trivially satisfied. Meaning vector is free to optimize it's
implementation by
moving instead of copying.
This patch makes `std::vector` unconditionally move elements when
exceptions are
disabled. This optimization is conforming according to the current
standard wording.
There are concerns that moving in `-fno-noexceptions`mode will be a
surprise to
users. For example, a user may be surprised to find their code is slower
with
exceptions enabled than it is disabled. I'm sympathetic to this
surprised, but
I don't think it should block this optimization.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, rsmith
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: zoecarver, christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62228
llvm-svn: 371867
This was reported as part of a bug report that ended up being a
duplicate for r340609, but I'm adding the test case since it's
ever so slightly different from what we had before.
llvm-svn: 370109
In r369429, I hoisted a floating point computation to a variable in order
to remove a warning. However, it turns out this doesn't play well with
floating point arithmetic. This commit reverts r369429 and instead casts
the result of the floating point computation to remove the warning.
Whether hoisting the computaiton to a variable should give the same
result can be investigated independently.
llvm-svn: 369693
On systems where sizeof(long) == sizeof(int)
the current tests failed. This commit updates
those tests to work on all systems.
std::abs has specific long specializations
which can be used instead.
llvm-svn: 369437
By stashing the computation of `E::max() - E::min()` in a variable, we
avoid the warning introduced in r367497. Note that we use `auto` to
avoid having to deduce the type of the computation, which is not a
problem since Clang provides `auto` as an extension even in C++03 (and
we disable warnings related to using C++11 extensions in the test suite).
llvm-svn: 369429
Summary:
The resolution of LWG 3199 makes sure that input-streaming into an empty bitset
does not set the failbit on the input stream.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65105
llvm-svn: 369422
In r368882, I enabled those tests for all AppleClang's above version 9.
However, it turns out that the feature is only supported starting with
AppleClang 10.0.1, not AppleClang 10.0.0. This commit fixes that hole.
llvm-svn: 369409
Like CTAD for std::unordered_set, AppleClang 9's support for CTAD is
insufficient. I suspect the corresponding LLVM Clang is broken too,
but we don't seem to have testers using that Clang.
llvm-svn: 368911
Summary:
We were using implicit deduction guides instead of explicit ones,
however the implicit ones don't do work anymore when changing the
constructors.
This commit adds the actual guides specified in the Standard to make
libc++ (1) closer to the Standard and (2) more resistent to changes
in std::tuple's constructors.
Reviewers: Quuxplusone
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65225
llvm-svn: 368599