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