The C standard requires that these be provided as functions even if they're
also provided as macros, and a strict reading of the C++ standard library rules
suggests that (for instance) &::isdigit == &::std::isdigit, so these wrappers
are technically non-conforming.
llvm-svn: 249475
The idea behind Nuxi CloudABI is that it is targeted at (but not limited to)
running networked services in a sandboxed environment. The model behind stdin,
stdout and stderr is strongly focused on interactive tools in a command shell.
CloudABI does not support the notion of stdin and stdout, as 'standard
input/output' does not apply to services. The concept of stderr does makes
sense though, as services do need some mechanism to log error messages in a
uniform way.
This patch extends libc++ in such a way that std::cin and std::cout and the
associated <cstdio>/<cwchar> functions can be disabled through the flags
_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_STDIN and _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_STDOUT, respectively. At the same time
it attempts to clean up src/iostream.cpp a bit. Instead of using a single array
of mbstate_t objects and hardcoding the array indices, it creates separate
objects that declared next to the iostream objects and their buffers. The code
is also restructured by interleaving the construction and setup of c* and wc*
objects. That way it is more obvious that this is done identically.
The c* and wc* objects already have separate unit tests. Make use of this fact
by adding XFAILs in case libcpp-has-no-std* is set. That way the tests work in
both directions. If stdin or stdout is disabled, these tests will therefore
test for the absence of c* and wc*.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8340
llvm-svn: 233275
Systems like FreeBSD's Capsicum and Nuxi CloudABI apply the concept of
capability-based security on the way processes can interact with the
filesystem API. It is no longer possible to interact with the VFS
through calls like open(), unlink(), rename(), etc. Instead, processes
are only allowed to interact with files and directories to which they
have been granted access. The *at() functions can be used for this
purpose.
This change adds a new config switch called
_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_GLOBAL_FILESYSTEM_NAMESPACE. If set, all functionality
that requires the global filesystem namespace will be disabled. More
concretely:
- fstream's open() function will be removed.
- cstdio will no longer pull in fopen(), rename(), etc.
- The test suite's get_temp_file_name() will be removed. This will cause
all tests that use the global filesystem namespace to break, but will
at least make all the other tests run (as get_temp_file_name will not
build anyway).
It is important to mention that this change will make fstream rather
useless on those systems for now. Still, I'd rather not have fstream
disabled entirely, as it is of course possible to come up with an
extension for fstream that would allow access to local filesystem
namespaces (e.g., by adding an openat() member function).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8194
Reviewed by: jroelofs (thanks!)
llvm-svn: 232049
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