We should check defined(__clang__) before the usage of the
clang diagnostic pragmas.
The [-Wswitch] warning in src/future.cpp should be ignored.
As the result, the equivalent GCC pragma is added.
llvm-svn: 197314
GCC does not support strong enum if -std=c++0x is not used.
Without the strong enum, we will see following error:
In file included from libcxx/include/ostream:131:0,
from libcxx/include/sstream:174,
from libcxx/include/complex:247,
from cpp03-headers.cpp:11:
libcxx/include/ios:419:68: error: 'io_errc' is not a class or namespace
libcxx/include/ios:420:66: error: 'io_errc' is not a class or namespace
To workaround this issue, this commit will define
_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_STRONG_ENUMS when we are compiling with
g++ without c++0x.
llvm-svn: 197313
type_traits:3280:31: error: expected primary-expression before 'decltype'
type_traits:3280:29: error: expected ';' at end of member declaration
memory:2415:49: error: function 'std::__1::default_delete<_Tp>::default_delete()'
defaulted on its first declaration must not have an exception-specification
memory:2435:49: error: function 'std::__1::default_delete<_Tp []>::default_delete()'
defaulted on its first declaration must not have an exception-specification
The attached patch defines _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_ADVANCED_SFINAE and
_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_DEFAULTED_FUNCTIONS for gcc version < 4.7, making
the library compile with gcc 4.6.4.
llvm-svn: 195431
functions in src/support/win32/locale_win32.cpp and locale_win32.h,
calling upon vsnprintf for which there is a MingW correct alternative.
Note! __USE_MINGW_ANSI_STDIO is not modified in this patch. In order to
use the __mingw version it must be defined before including the MingW
headers.
llvm-svn: 195044
easier to use freshly-built clang with freshly-built libc++.
Basically, this makes it possible to run clang with libc++ without
having to install it, even if you don't have any version of libc++
installed in /usr/
llvm-svn: 194825
trivial in C++03, thus making it trivial in both C++03 and C++11.
This patch allows one to opt-in/out of this decision with a macro. You can
choose to have the pair copy constructor always be trivial, or always be
non-trivial. The flag controlling this is now _LIBCPP_TRIVIAL_PAIR_COPY_CTOR.
The client can define this flag to 1, and the pair copy constructor will be
trivial (when possible of course), or to 0, and the pair copy constructor will
be nontrivial.
Default settings for this flag are set in <__config> (as usual). With this
commit the default is _LIBCPP_TRIVIAL_PAIR_COPY_CTOR=1 for all platforms
except __APPLE__, which defaults to _LIBCPP_TRIVIAL_PAIR_COPY_CTOR=0.
llvm-svn: 194742
pair, and a couple of pair-like implementation detail types. The
C++98/03 and 11 standards all specify that the copy constructor of
pair<int, int> is trivial. However as libc++ tracked the draft C++11
standard over the years, this copy constructor became non-trivial, and
then just recently was corrected back to trivial for C++11.
Unfortunately (for libc++1) the Itanium ABI specifies different calling
conventions for trivial and non-trivial copy constructors. Therefore
currently the C++03 libc++ copy constructor for pair<int, int> is ABI
incompatible with the C++11 libc++ copy constructor for pair<int, int>.
This is Bad(tm). This patch corrects the situation by making this copy
constructor trivial in C++03 mode as well.
Just in case it is needed for an incomplete C++11 compiler, libc++
retains the ability to support pair with rvalue references, but without
defaulted special members. However the pair needs non-trivial special
members to implement this special case, (as it did when clang was in
this place a couple of years ago).
During this work a bug was also found and fixed in
is_trivially_constructible.
And there is a minor drive-by fix in <__config> regarding
__type_visibility__.
A test is updated to ensure that the copy constructor of pair<int, int>
is trivial in both C++03 and C++11. This test will necessarily fail for
a compiler that implements rvalue references but not defaulted special
members.
llvm-svn: 194536
http://lab.llvm.org:8013/builders/libcxx_clang-x86_64-darwin11-RA
lit.py: <string>:230: note: inferred use_system_lib as: False
lit.py: <string>:247: fatal: C++ ABI setting None unsupported for tests
cxx_abi is geting set to None, and the lit script errors out shortly after
that. This patch changes the default of cxx_abi from None to 'libcxxabi'.
This is likely not the right way to fix this problem. However it gets the
buildbot running again. Improvements to this fix are welcome.
llvm-svn: 192609
libsupc++ does not implement the dependent EH ABI and the
functionality it uses to implement std::exception_ptr (which it
declares as an alias of std::__exception_ptr::exception_ptr) is not
directly exported to clients. So we have little choice but to hijack
std::__exception_ptr::exception_ptr's (which fortunately has the
same layout as our std::exception_ptr) copy constructor, assignment
operator and destructor (which are part of its stable ABI), and its
rethrow_exception(std::__exception_ptr::exception_ptr) function.
Also, remove some out of date comments.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1826
llvm-svn: 192076
Linking against libstdc++, rather than libsupc++, is probably better
for people who need to link against clients of libstdc++. Because
libsupc++ is provided only as a static library, its globals are not
shared between the static library and the copy linked into libstdc++.
This has been found to cause at least one test failure.
This also removes a number of symbols which were multiply defined
between libstdc++ and libc++, only when linking with libstdc++.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1825
llvm-svn: 192075
The remaining multiple definitions were flushed out by attempting to
link libsupc++ and libc++ into the same executable with --whole-archive,
e.g.
clang++ -I../llvm/projects/libcxx/include -nodefaultlibs -Wl,--whole-archive lib/libc++.a /usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.6/libsupc++.a -Wl,--no-whole-archive -lgcc -lgcc_s -lc -lpthread -lrt
(The same technique was used to flush out multiple definitions in
libstdc++.)
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1824
llvm-svn: 192074
I've changed it so we don't set highest level warnings (all) for MSVC when building projects using cmake and instead leave the default. That's /W4 on my machine and seems to be ok.
With all warnings on for msvc, we see literally thousands of warnings. 99.99% aren't relevant and just obscure the ones that are.
I think the user can still override things if they want something different from the command line when using cmake.
llvm-svn: 192010
The issue this patch seeks to address is that MS's compiler (cl.exe) doesn't support the __attribute__((__weak__)) or __atribute__((__visibility__("default")) syntax; so a solution must be found where cl.exe doesn't see this syntax.
This patch seeks to solve this problem by changing code patterned like this:
__attribute__((__weak__, __visibility__("default")))
void* operator new(size_t size, const std::nothrow_t&) _NOEXCEPT { /*snip*/; return p; }
to code like this:
_LIBCPP_WEAK
void* operator new(size_t size, const std::nothrow_t&) _NOEXCEPT { return p; }
Howard: Thanks for all the comments regarding the default visibility
tag on the definition. I agree it isn't needed, and that there are lots
of other places where it is missing. That being said, I'm not wanting
to rock the boat on that issue right now. So I've added it back to the
definition via _LIBCPP_FUNC_VIS. A later pass dedicated just to this
issue can bring things in to a consistent state one way or the other.
Note that we do not want to have the exact same attributes on the
declaration and defintion in this case. The declaration should not be
marked weak, whereas the definition should (which is what G M's patch
did). I've fully tested on OS X to ensure that the resultant attribute
syntax actually works.
llvm-svn: 192007
The patch touches these files:
locale
array
deque
new
string
utility
vector
__bit_reference
__split_buffer
locale_win32.h
There is no intended functionality change and it is expected that reversing the position of the inline keyword with regard to the other keywords does not change the meaning of anything, least not for apple/Linux etc.
It is intended to make libcxx more consistent with itself and to prevent the 1000 or so
"inline.cpp(3) : warning C4141: 'inline' : used more than once" warnings that MS's cl.exe compiler emits without this patch, i.e. if inline is not the first keyword before a function name etc.
Prefer "inline [other inline related keyword]" over "[other related keyword] inline".
After this patch, libcxx should be consistent to this pattern.
llvm-svn: 191987
libcxx doesn't build with -Werror because of #warnings in its source
code. But when libcxx is built as an external LLVM project, it inherits
LLVM build flags, breaking the build if LLVM_ENABLE_WERROR is enabled.
llvm-svn: 191814
Otherwise if libcxx is built as an LLVM external project (after r191624),
"include(config-ix)" will include config-ix.cmake from LLVM, not from libcxx,
which will result in misconfigured build tree.
llvm-svn: 191657
libsupc++ in typeinfo.cpp, bringing it into agreement with
exception.cpp. This fixes link errors due to duplicate symbols from
this translation unit.
llvm-svn: 191397
iterator, allocator) constructor with the intention of it being
implicitly converted to the allocator type, it is possible for overload
resolution to favour the (iterator, iterator, enable_if) constructor.
Eliminate this possibility by moving the enable_if to one of the
existing arguments and removing the third argument.
llvm-svn: 191145
- The lit builtin XFAIL handling is more restrictive than what we were
previously using, and for now I'd rather keep the lit one restrictive.
llvm-svn: 189692
1. I had been detecting and trapping iterator == and \!= among iterators
in different containers as an error. But the trapping itself is actually
an error.
Consider:
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
#include <algorithm>
template <class C>
void
display(const C& c)
{
std::cout << "{";
bool first = true;
for (const auto& x : c)
{
if (\!first)
std::cout << ", ";
first = false;
std::cout << x;
}
std::cout << "}\n";
}
int
main()
{
typedef std::vector<int> V;
V v1 = {1, 3, 5};
V v2 = {2, 4, 6};
display(v1);
display(v2);
V::iterator i = std::find(v1.begin(), v1.end(), 1);
V::iterator j = std::find(v2.begin(), v2.end(), 2);
if (*i == *j)
i = j; // perfectly legal
// ...
if (i \!= j) // the only way to check
v2.push_back(*i);
display(v1);
display(v2);
}
It is legal to assign an iterator from one container to another of the
same type. This is required to work. One might want to test whether or
not such an assignment had been made. The way one performs such a check
is using the iterator's ==, \!= operator. This is a logical and necessary
function and does not constitute an error.
2. I had a header circular dependence bug when _LIBCPP_DEBUG2 is defined.
This caused a problem in several of the libc++ tests.
Fixed.
3. There is a serious problem when _LIBCPP_DEBUG2=1 at the moment in that
std::basic_string is inoperable. std::basic_string uses __wrap_iterator
to implement its iterators. __wrap_iterator has been rigged up in debug
mode to support vector. But string hasn't been rigged up yet. This means
that one gets false positives when using std::string in debug mode. I've
upped std::string's priority in www/debug_mode.html.
llvm-svn: 187636
MSVC-specific, MSVCRT-specific, or Windows-specific. Because Clang can
also define _MSC_VER, and MSVCRT is not necessarily the only C runtime,
these macros should not be used interchangeably.
This patch divides all Windows-related bits into the aforementioned
categories. Two new macros are introduced:
- _LIBCPP_MSVC: Defined when compiling with MSVC. Detected using
_MSC_VER, excluding Clang.
- _LIBCPP_MSVCRT: Defined when using the Microsoft CRT. This is the default
when _WIN32 is defined.
This leaves _WIN32 for code using the Windows API.
This also corrects the spelling of _LIBCP_HAS_IS_BASE_OF to _LIBCPP_HAS_IS_BASE_OF.
Nico, please prepare a patch for CREDITS.TXT, thanks.
llvm-svn: 187593
There are actually two debug modes:
1. -D_LIBCPP_DEBUG2 or -D_LIBCPP_DEBUG2=1
This is a relatively expensive debug mode, but very thorough. This is normally what you want to debug with, but may turn O(1) operations into O(N) operations.
2. -D_LIBCPP_DEBUG2=0
This is "debug lite." Only preconditions that can be checked with O(1) expense are checked. For example range checking on an indexing operation. But not iterator validity.
llvm-svn: 187369
unordered_set, however it is not complete yet for unordered_multiset,
unordered_map or unordered_multimap. There has been a lot of work done
for these other three containers, however that work was done just to
keep all of the tests passing.
You can try this out with -D_LIBCPP_DEBUG2. You will have to link to a
libc++.dylib that has been compiled with src/debug.cpp. So far, vector
(but not vector<bool>), list, and unordered_set are treated. I hope to
get the other three unordered containers up fairly quickly now that
unordered_set is done.
The flag _LIBCPP_DEBUG2 will eventually be changed to _LIBCPP_DEBUG, but
not today. This is my second effort at getting debug mode going for
libc++, and I'm not quite yet ready to throw all of the work under the
first attempt away.
The basic design is that all of the debug information is kept in a
central database, instead of in the containers. This has been done as
an attempt to have debug mode and non-debug mode be ABI compatible with
each other. There are some circumstances where if you construct a
container in an environment without debug mode and pass it into debug
mode, the checking will get confused and let you know with a readable
error message. Passing containers the other way: from debug mode out to
a non-debugging mode container should be 100% safe (at least that is the
goal).
llvm-svn: 186991