This fixes most references to the paths:
llvm.org/svn/
llvm.org/git/
llvm.org/viewvc/
github.com/llvm-mirror/
github.com/llvm-project/
reviews.llvm.org/diffusion/
to instead point to https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.
This is *not* a trivial substitution, because additionally, all the
checkout instructions had to be migrated to instruct users on how to
use the monorepo layout, setting LLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS instead of
checking out various projects into various subdirectories.
I've attempted to not change any scripts here, only documentation. The
scripts will have to be addressed separately.
Additionally, I've deleted one document which appeared to be outdated
and unneeded:
lldb/docs/building-with-debug-llvm.txt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57330
llvm-svn: 352514
glibc supports versioning, so it's possible to build against older
version and run against newer version. This is sometimes relied on
in practice, e.g. in Fuchsia build we build against older sysroot
(equivalent to Ubuntu Trusty) to cover the broadest possible range
of host systems, but that doesn't necessarily match the system that
binary is going to run on which may have newer version, in which case
the compile test used in curr_symbol is going to fail. Using runtime
check is more reliable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56702
llvm-svn: 352425
Refactor the get_llvm_lit_path() logic to respect LLVM_EXTERNAL_LIT,
and require the fallback to be defined explicitly
as LLVM_DEFAULT_EXTERNAL_LIT. This fixes building libcxx standalone
after r346888.
The old logic was using LLVM_EXTERNAL_LIT both as user-defined cache
variable and an optional pre-definition of default value from caller
(e.g. libcxx). It included a hack to make this work by assigning
the value back and forth but it was fragile and stopped working
in libcxx.
The new logic is simpler and more transparent. Default value is
provided in a separate variable, and used only when user-specified
variable is empty (i.e. not overriden).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57282
llvm-svn: 352374
The check_library_exists CMake uses a custom symbol definition. This
is a problem when checking for C library symbols because Clang
recognizes many of them as builtins, and returns the
-Wbuiltin-requires-header (or -Wincompatible-library-redeclaration)
error. When building with -Werror which is the default, this causes
the check_library_exists check fail making the build think that C
library isn't available.
To avoid this issue, we should use a symbol that isn't recognized by
Clang and wouldn't cause the same issue. __libc_start_main seems like
reasonable choice that fits the bill.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57142
llvm-svn: 352341
The unordered_set and unordered_multiset iterators are specified in the standard as follows:
using iterator = implementation-defined; // see [container.requirements]
using const_iterator = implementation-defined; // see [container.requirements]
using local_iterator = implementation-defined; // see [container.requirements]
using const_local_iterator = implementation-defined; // see [container.requirements]
The pairs iterator/const_iterator and local_iterator/const_local_iterator
are not required to be the same. The reasonable requirement would be that
iterator can convert to const_iterator and local_iterator can convert to
const_local_iterator. This patch weakens the check and makes the test
more portable.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D56493.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 352083
...so the tests under test/std/utilities/any continue to
compile with MSVC's standard library.
While we're here, let's test >C++17 features when _HAS_CXX20.
llvm-svn: 351991
all missed!
Thanks to Alex Bradbury for pointing this out, and the fact that I never
added the intended `legacy` anchor to the developer policy. Add that
anchor too. With hope, this will cause the links to all resolve
successfully.
llvm-svn: 351731
D56445 bumped the minimum Mac OS X version required for aligned
allocation from 10.13 to 10.14. This caused libc++ tests depending
on the old value to break.
This patch updates the XFAILs for those tests to include 10.13.
llvm-svn: 351670
to reflect the new license. These used slightly different spellings that
defeated my regular expressions.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351648
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
This installs the new developer policy and moves all of the license
files across all LLVM projects in the monorepo to the new license
structure. The remaining projects will be moved independently.
Note that I've left odd formatting and other idiosyncracies of the
legacy license structure text alone to make the diff easier to read.
Critically, note that we do not in any case *remove* the old license
notice or terms, as that remains necessary until we finish the
relicensing process.
I've updated a few license files that refer to the LLVM license to
instead simply refer generically to whatever license the LLVM project is
under, basically trying to minimize confusion.
This is really the culmination of so many people. Chris led the
community discussions, drafted the policy update and organized the
multi-year string of meeting between lawyers across the community to
figure out the strategy. Numerous lawyers at companies in the community
spent their time figuring out initial answers, and then the Foundation's
lawyer Heather Meeker has done *so* much to help refine and get us ready
here. I could keep going on, but I just want to make sure everyone
realizes what a huge community effort this has been from the begining.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56897
llvm-svn: 351631
D56445 bumped the minimum Mac OS X version required for aligned
allocation from 10.13 to 10.14. This caused libc++ tests depending
on the old value to break.
This patch updates the XFAILs for those tests to include 10.13.
llvm-svn: 351625
Patch by Samuel Thibault
The GNU/Hurd system does not define an arbitrary PATH_MAX limitation, the POSIX 2001 realpath
extension can be used instead, and the size of symlinks can be determined.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D54677
llvm-svn: 351414
Summary:
FreeBSD ships a very old and deprecated ABI for std::pair where the copy and move constructors are not allowed to be trivial. D25389 change how this was implemented by introducing a non-trivial base class. This patch, introduced in October 2016, introduced an ABI bug that caused nested `std::pair` instantiations to have padding. For example:
```
using PairT = std::pair< std::pair<char, char>, char >;
static_assert(offsetof(PairT, first) == 0, "First member should exist at offset zero"); // Fails on FreeBSD!
```
The bug occurs because the base class for the first element (the nested pair) cannot be put at offset zero because the top-level pair already has the same base class laid out there.
This patch fixes that ABI bug by templating the dummy base class on the same parameters as the pair.
Technically this fix is an ABI break for users who depend on the "broken" ABI introduced in 2016. I'm putting this up for review so that the FreeBSD maintainers can sign off on fixing the ABI by breaking the ABI.
Another option, since we have to "break" the ABI to fix it, would be to move FreeBSD off the deprecated non-trivial pair ABI instead.
Also see:
* https://llvm.org/PR40230
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D21329
Reviewers: rsmith, dim, emaste
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: mclow.lists, krytarowski, christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56357
llvm-svn: 351290
Summary:
Starting in Clang 8.0 and GCC 8.0, `alignof` and `__alignof` return different values in same cases. Specifically `alignof` and `_Alignof` return the minimum alignment for a type, where as `__alignof` returns the preferred alignment. libc++ currently uses `__alignof` but means to use `alignof`. See llvm.org/PR39713
This patch introduces the macro `_LIBCPP_ALIGNOF` so we can control which spelling gets used.
This patch does not introduce any ABI guard to provide the old behavior with newer compilers. However, if we decide that is needed, this patch makes it trivial to implement.
I think we should commit this change immediately, and decide what we want to do about the ABI afterwards.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF
Reviewed By: ldionne, EricWF
Subscribers: jyknight, christof, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54814
llvm-svn: 351289
Summary:
This patch implements all the feature test macros libc++ currently supports, as specified by the standard or cppreference prior to C++2a.
The tests and `<version>` header are generated using a script. The script contains a table of each feature test macro, the headers it should be accessible from, and its values of each dialect of C++.
When a new feature test macro is added or needed, the table should be updated and the script re-run.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, jfb, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: arphaman, jfb, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56750
llvm-svn: 351286
Summary:
The tests need to create files larger than 2GB, but size_t is 32-bit
on a 32-bit system. Make use of explicit off64_t APIs so we can still
use a default off_t for the tests while enabling 64-bit file offsets
for create_file.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56619
llvm-svn: 351225
libc++ allows changing the namespace, don't assume __1 in the test
to avoid the test failure if different namespace is being used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56698
llvm-svn: 351220
When catopen is missing, do_open, do_get and do_close end up being
no-op, and as such their parameters will be unused which triggers a
warning/error when building with -Wunused-parameter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56023
llvm-svn: 351027
This patch aims to help clang with better information so it can inline
__bit_reference count function usage for both std::biset. Current clang
inliner can not infer that the passed typed will be used only to select
the optimized variant, it evaluates the type argument and type check as
a load plus compare (although later optimization phases correctly
optimized this out).
It is mainly to help llvm inliner to generate better code for std::bitset
count for aarch64. It helps on both runtime and code size, since if inline
decides that _VSTD::count should not be inlined the vectorization will
create both aligned and unaligned variants (which add both code size and
runtime costs)
llvm-svn: 350936
Summary:
P0602R4 makes the special member functions of optional and variant
conditionally trivial based on the types in the optional/variant.
We already implemented that, but the tests were organized as if this
were a non-standard extension. This patch reorganizes the tests in a
way that makes more sense since this is not an extension anymore.
Reviewers: EricWF, mpark, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54772
llvm-svn: 350884
I have a big patch coming up, and this indirection is required to avoid hitting the following after my big change:
error: empty struct has size 0 in C, size 1 in C++ [-Werror,-Wextern-c-compat]
llvm-svn: 350772
There were 3 tests with 'int main(void)', and 6 with the return type on a different line. I'm about to send a patch for main in tests, and this NFC change is unrelated.
llvm-svn: 350770
This script can be used by CI systems to test things like availability
markup and binary compatibility on older MacOS versions. This is still
a bit rough on the edges, for example we don't test libc++abi yet.
llvm-svn: 350752
Summary:
r306722 added diagnostics when aligned allocation is used with deployment
targets that do not support it, but the first macosx supporting aligned
allocation was incorrectly set to 10.13. In reality, the dylib shipped
with macosx10.13 does not support aligned allocation, but the dylib
shipped with macosx10.14 does.
Reviewers: ahatanak
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56445
llvm-svn: 350649
We already have a specialization that will use memcpy for construction
of trivial types from an iterator range like
std::vector<int>(int *, int *);
But if we have const-ness mismatch like
std::vector<int>(const int *, const int *);
we would use a slow path that copies each element individually. This change
enables the optimal specialization for const-ness mismatch. Fixes PR37574.
Contributions to the patch are made by Arthur O'Dwyer, Louis Dionne.
rdar://problem/40485845
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, ldionne, scanon
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, howard.hinnant, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48342
llvm-svn: 350583
This is useful when static libc++ library is being linked into
shared libraries that may be used in combination with libraries.
We want to avoid we exporting libc++ symbols in those cases where
this option is useful. This is provided as a CMake option and can
be enabled by libc++ vendors as needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55404
llvm-svn: 350489
This patch changes <experimental/foo> to use #warning instead of
is harmful to common feature detection idioms.
We should also consider only emitting the warning when __DEPRECATED is
defined, like we do in the <ext/foo> headers. Users may want to specify
"-Werror=-W#warnings" while still ignoring the libc++ warnings.
llvm-svn: 350485
last_write_time(sym, new_time) changes the modification time of the file
referenced by the symlink. But reading through the symlink may change the
symlinks's access time.
This meant the previous test that checked that the symlinks access
time was unchanged was incorrect and made the test flaky.
This patch removes this test (there really is no non-flaky way
to test that the new access time coorisponds to the time at which
the symlink was last dereferenced). This should unflake the test.
llvm-svn: 350478
Summary:
Tests marked with the flaky attribute ("FLAKY_TEST.")
can still report false positives in local tests and on the
NetBSD buildbot.
Additionally a number of tests (probably all threaded
ones) unmarked with the flaky attribute is flaky on
NetBSD.
An ideal solution on the libcxx side would be to raise
max retries for NetBSD and mark failing tests with
the flaky flag, however this adds more maintenance
burden and constant monitoring of flaky tests.
Reduce the work and handle flaky tests as more flaky
on NetBSD and allow flakiness of other tests on
NetBSD.
Reviewers: mgorny, EricWF
Reviewed By: mgorny
Subscribers: christof, llvm-commits, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56064
llvm-svn: 350170
Summary:
We already have the negation of that as _LIBCPP_HAS_NONUNIQUE_TYPEINFO.
Having both defined is confusing, since only one of them is used.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54537
llvm-svn: 349947
This patch implements path::compare according to the current spec. The
only observable change is the ordering of "/foo" and "foo", which orders
the two paths based on having or not having a root directory (instead
of lexically comparing "/" to "foo").
llvm-svn: 349881
Some tests assume that iteration through an unordered multimap elements
will return them in the same order as at the container creation. This
assumption is not true since the container is unordered, so that no
specific order of elements is ever guaranteed for such container. This
patch introduces checks verifying that any iteration will return elements
exactly from a set of valid values and without repetition, but in no
particular order.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D54838.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 349780
Makes libc++ behavior consistent between C++03 and C++11.
Can use `decltype` in C++03 because `include/__config` defines a macro when
`decltype` is not available.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, erik.pilkington, ldionne
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: dexonsmith, cfe-commits, howard.hinnant, ldionne, christof, jkorous, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48753
llvm-svn: 349676
That test doesn't fail anymore since r349378, since the assertions that
r349378 removed must have been bugs in the dylib at some point.
llvm-svn: 349484
This test was initially marked as XFAIL using `XFAIL: macosx10.YY`, and
was then moved to `UNSUPPORTED: macosx10.YY`. The intent is to mark the
test as XFAILing when a deployment target older than macosx10.14 is used,
and the right way to do this is `XFAIL: availability=macosx10.YY`.
llvm-svn: 349426
Add a target_info definition for NetBSD. The definition is based
on the one used by FreeBSD, with libcxxrt replaced by libc++abi,
and using llvm-libunwind since we need to use its unwinder
implementation to build anyway.
Additionally, XFAIL the 30 tests that fail because of non-implemented
locale features. According to the manual, NetBSD implements only
LC_CTYPE part of locale handling. However, there is a locale database
in the system and locale specifications are validated against it,
so it makes sense to list the common locales as supported.
If I'm counting correctly, this change enables additional 43 passing
tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55767
llvm-svn: 349379
Remove the two test cases for \xDA and \xFA with UTF-8 locale, as both
characters alone are invalid in UTF-8 (short sequences). Upon removing
them, the test passes on Linux again (and also on NetBSD, after adding
appropriate locale configuration).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55746
llvm-svn: 349378
This is a re-application of r345525, which had been reverted by fear of
a regression.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D53994.
Thanks to Denis Yaroshevskiy for the patch.
llvm-svn: 349358
Replace the mknod() call with socket() + bind() for creating unix
sockets. The mknod() method is not portable and does not work
on NetBSD while binding the socket should work on all systems supporting
unix sockets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55576
llvm-svn: 349305
Explicitly disable the -Wformat-zero-length diagnostic when running
ctime tests, since one of the test cases passes zero-length format
string to strftime(). When strftime() is appropriately decorated
with __attribute__(format, ...), this caused the test to fail because
of this warning (e.g. on NetBSD).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55661
llvm-svn: 349294
NetBSD defines character classes up to 0x2000. Use 0x8000 as a safe
__regex_word that hopefully will not collide with other values
in the foreseeable future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55657
llvm-svn: 349293
Otherwise, even specifying a runtime root different from the library
we're linking against won't work -- the library we're linking against
is always used. This is undesirable if we try testing something like
linking against a recent libc++.dylib but running the tests against an
older version (the back-deployment use case).
llvm-svn: 349171
Fixes a bug where functions would get exported when building with
-fvisibility=hidden and defining _LIBCPP_DISABLE_VISIBILITY_ANNOTATIONS. No
visibility annotations should be added in this case.
The new logic for _LIBCPP_EXPORTED_FROM_ABI matches that of the other visibility
annotations around it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55664
llvm-svn: 349080
Also, add tests making sure that vector and deque both catch the problem
when assertions are enabled. Otherwise, deque would segfault and vector
would never terminate.
llvm-svn: 348994
Other standard libraries don't implement availability markup, so it doesn't
make sense to e.g. XFAIL tests based on availability markup outside of
libc++.
llvm-svn: 348871
This is part of an ongoing cleanup of the LIT test suite, where I'm
trying to reduce the number of configuration options. In this case,
the original intent seemed to be running the test suite with libstdc++,
but this is now supported by specifying cxx_stdlib_under_test=libstdc++.
llvm-svn: 348868
It is unreachable because we test that the cxx_stdlib_under_test is
in the supported set of libraries elsewhere. Furthermore, this code
relied on the `use_stdlib_type`, which is never defined.
llvm-svn: 348867
Summary:
std::tuple marks its constructors as noexcept when the corresponding
memberwise constructors are noexcept too -- this commit improves std::pair
so that it behaves the same.
This is a re-application of r348824, which broke the build in C++03 mode
because a test was marked as supported in C++03 when it shouldn't be.
Note:
I did not add support in the explicit and non-explicit `pair(_Tuple&& __p)`
constructors because those are non-standard extensions, and supporting them
properly is tedious (we have to copy the rvalue-referenceness of the deduced
_Tuple&& onto the result of tuple_element).
<rdar://problem/29537079>
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48669
llvm-svn: 348847
Summary:
std::tuple marks its constructors as noexcept when the corresponding
memberwise constructors are noexcept too -- this commit improves std::pair
so that it behaves the same.
Note:
I did not add support in the explicit and non-explicit `pair(_Tuple&& __p)`
constructors because those are non-standard extensions, and supporting them
properly is tedious (we have to copy the rvalue-referenceness of the deduced
_Tuple&& onto the result of tuple_element).
<rdar://problem/29537079>
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48669
llvm-svn: 348824
Patch from Jordan Soyke (jsoyke@google.com)
Reviewed as D55520
This change adds a new internal class, called __value_func, that adds
a minimal subset of value-type semantics to the internal __func interface.
The change is NFC, and is cleanup for the upcoming ABI v2 function implementation (D55045).
llvm-svn: 348778
Summary:
When providing a non-const-callable comparator in a map or set, the
warning diagnostic does not include the point of instantiation of
the container that triggered the warning, which makes it difficult
to track down the problem. This commit improves the diagnostic by
placing it directly in the body of the associative container.
The same change is applied to unordered associative containers, which
had a similar problem.
Finally, this commit cleans up the forward declarations of several
map and unordered_map helpers, which are not needed anymore.
<rdar://problem/41370747>
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48955
llvm-svn: 348529
Otherwise, some tests would fail when a relative path was passed,
because they'd use the relative path from a different directory
than the current working directory.
llvm-svn: 348525
The tests were marked to fail based on the 'availability' LIT feature.
However, those tests should really only be failing when we run them
against the dylibs that were deployed on macosx10.7 and macosx10.8,
which the deployment target has nothing to do with.
This caused the tests to unexpectedly pass when running the tests
with deployment target macosx10.{7,8} but running with a recent dylib.
llvm-svn: 348520
The standard section [array.zero] requires the return value of begin()
and end() methods of a zero-sized array to be unique. Eric Fiselier
clarifies: "That unique value cannot be null, and must be properly aligned".
This patch adds checks for the first part of this clarification: unique
value returned by these methods cannot be null.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D55366.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 348509
The section array.zero says: "The return value of data() is unspecified".
This patch marks all checks of the array<T, 0>.data() return value as
libc++ specific.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D55364.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 348485
Whether an explicit instantiation declaration should be provided is not
a matter of availability markup.
This problem is exemplified by the fact that some tests were incorrectly
marked as XFAIL when they should instead have been using the definition
of streams from the headers, and hence passing, and that, regardless of
whether visibility annotations are enabled.
llvm-svn: 348436
Summary:
Running the tests without availability enabled doesn't really make sense:
availability annotations allow catching errors at compile-time instead
of link-time. Running the tests without availability enabled allows
confirming that a test breaks at link-time under some configuration,
but it is more useful to instead check that it should fail at compile-time.
Always enabling availability in the lit test suite will greatly simplify
XFAILs and troubleshooting of failing tests, which is currently a giant
pain because we have these two levels of possible failure: link-time and
compile-time.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55079
llvm-svn: 348296
Summary:
This was voted into C++20 in San Diego. Note that there was a revision
D0318R2 which did include unwrap_reference_t, but we mistakingly voted
P0318R1 into the C++20 Working Draft (which does not include
unwrap_reference_t). This patch implements D0318R2, which is what
we'll end up with in the Working Draft once this mistake has been
fixed.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54485
llvm-svn: 348138
The test was previously marked as unsupported on all Apple platforms, when
we really just want to mark it as unsupported for previously shipped dylibs
on macosx.
llvm-svn: 347920
Summary:
std::bad_array_length was added by n3467, but this never made it into C++.
This commit removes the definition of std::bad_array_length from the headers
AND from the shared library. See the comments in the ABI changelog for details
about the ABI implications of this change.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, dexonsmith, howard.hinnant, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54804
llvm-svn: 347903
This reverts commit 087f065cb0c7463f521a62599884493aaee2ea12.
The tests were failing on 32 bit builds, and I don't have time
to clean them up right now. I'll recommit tomorrow with fixed tests.
llvm-svn: 347816
Summary:
Starting in Clang 8.0 and GCC 8.0, `alignof` and `__alignof` return different values in same cases. Specifically `alignof` and `_Alignof` return the minimum alignment for a type, where as `__alignof` returns the preferred alignment. libc++ currently uses `__alignof` but means to use `alignof`. See llvm.org/PR39713
This patch introduces the macro `_LIBCPP_ALIGNOF` so we can control which spelling gets used.
This patch does not introduce any ABI guard to provide the old behavior with newer compilers. However, if we decide that is needed, this patch makes it trivial to implement.
I think we should commit this change immediately, and decide what we want to do about the ABI afterwards.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54814
llvm-svn: 347787
Summary:
std::dynarray had been proposed for C++14, but it was pulled out from C++14
and there are no plans to standardize it anymore.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54801
llvm-svn: 347783
Summary:
When the Xcode Command Line tools are not installed but CMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT is
set, we would try to re-export symbols from the libc++abi.dylib shipped in
the sysroot, which does not exist. This commit changes the build on OS X to
always re-export symbols from the explicit re-export lists, which doesn't
change depending on what system you're building on, and is therefore much
less flaky.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54595
llvm-svn: 347708
This attribute should appear only on the first declaration. This
patch cleans up <string> by removing the attribute on redeclarations.
llvm-svn: 347608
This patch adds an implementation of __resize_default_init as
described in P1072R2. Additionally, it uses it in filesystem to
demonstrate its intended utility.
Once P1072 lands, or if it changes it's interface, I will adjust
the internal libc++ implementation to match.
llvm-svn: 347589
In r339743, I marked several aligned allocation tests as downright
unsupported on macosx in an attempt to unbreak the build. It turns
out that marking them as unuspported whenever we're on OS X is way
too coarse grained. This commit marks the tests as XFAIL with more
granularity.
llvm-svn: 347585
The test was marked as failing whenever the deployment target was 10.12
or older, but in reality the test passes when the deployment target is
10.12 on recent Clangs. This happens because only older clangs do not
honor the -faligned-allocation flag, which disables any availability
error related to aligned allocation support, regardless of the
deployment target.
llvm-svn: 347580
Summary:
In PR39232, we noticed that some variant tests started failing in C++2a mode
with recent Clangs, because the rules for literal types changed in C++2a. As
a result, a temporary fix was checked in (enabling the test only in C++17).
This commit is what I believe should be the long term fix: I removed the
tests that checked constexpr default-constructibility with a weird type
from the tests for index() and valueless_by_exception(), and instead I
added tests for those using an obviously literal type in the test for the
default constructor.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, libcxx-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54767
llvm-svn: 347568
This is a revert of r347421, except I'm using the with_system_cxx_lib
lit feature instead of availability to mark the test as unsupported
(because the problem is a bug in the dylib itself). In r347421, I said
I wasn't able to reproduce the issue and that's why I was removing it:
this was because I ran lit slightly wrong. The problem mentioned really
exists.
llvm-svn: 347475
We used to print a Python list corresponding to the command. It is more
useful to print the joined string so it can be copy/pasted directly when
a test fails.
llvm-svn: 347471
We don't support mac OS 10.6 and older anymore, so this macro can never
be defined. This bit of code had been added in D28931 as a fix for
PR31448, but it doesn't seem necessary anymore.
llvm-svn: 347427
The iterator types for different specializations of containers with the
same element type but different allocators are not required to be
convertible. This patch makes the test to take the iterator type from
the same container specialization as the created container.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D54806.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 347423
I wasn't able to reproduce the issue referred to by the comment using
the libc++'s shipped with mac OS X 10.7 and 10.8, so I assume this may
have been fixed in a function that is now shipped in the headers. In
that case, the tests will pass no matter what dylib we're using.
In the worst case, some test bots will start failing and I'll understand
why I was wrong, and I can create an actual lit feature for it. Note
that I could just leave this test alone, but this change is on the path
towards eradicating vendor-specific availability markup from the test
suite.
llvm-svn: 347421
r347395 changed the ABI list on Linux, but two of those symbols are still
being exported from the shared object:
_ZSt18make_exception_ptrINSt3__112future_errorEESt13exception_ptrT_
_ZNSt3__1plIcNS_11char_traitsIcEENS_9allocatorIcEEEENS_12basic_stringIT_T0_T1_EERKS9_PKS6_
This commit makes sure those symbols are not exported, as they should be.
llvm-svn: 347399
Summary:
This commit marks a few functions as hidden and removes them from the ABI list
on Linux such that libc++ can be built with -fvisibility=hidden. The functions
marked as hidden by this patch were exported from the shared object only
because they were implicitly instantiated function templates. It is safe
to stop exporting those symbols from the shared object because nobody could
actually depend on them: implicit instantiations are not taken from shared
objects.
The symbols removed in this commit are basically the same that had been
removed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D53868, but that patch had to be reverted
because it broke the build (because the functions were not marked as hidden
like this patch does).
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54639
llvm-svn: 347395
Summary:
Benchmarks for std::sort, std::stable_sort, std::make_heap,
std::sort_heap, std::pop_heap and std::push_heap.
The benchmarks are run with integers and strings, and with different
sorted input.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, mgrang, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53978
llvm-svn: 347329
The XFAIL started passing since we're only testing for trivial-copyability of
reference_wrapper in C++14 and above. This commit constrains the XFAIL to
gcc-4.9 with C++14 (it would also fail on C++17 and above, but those standards
are not available with GCC 4.9).
llvm-svn: 347264
Some tests use type std::max_align_t, but don't include <cstddef> header
directly. As a result, these tests won't compile against some conformant
libraries.
Reviewed as https://reviews.llvm.org/D54645.
Thanks to Andrey Maksimov for the patch.
llvm-svn: 347232