This patch implements changes to allow _LIBCPP_ASSERT to throw on failure
instead of aborting. The main changes needed to do this are:
1. Change _LIBCPP_ASSERT to call a handler via a replacable function pointer
instead of calling abort directly. Additionally this patch implements two
handler functions, one which aborts and another that throws an exception.
2. Add _NOEXCEPT_DEBUG macro for disabling noexcept spec on function which
contain _LIBCPP_ASSERT. This is required in order to prevent assertion
failures throwing through a noexcept function. This macro has no effect
unless _LIBCPP_DEBUG_USE_EXCEPTIONS is defined.
Having a non-aborting _LIBCPP_ASSERT is very important to allow sane testing of
debug mode. Currently we can only have one test case per file, since the test
case will cause the program to abort. Testing debug mode this way would require
thousands of test files, most of which would be 95% boiler plate. I don't think
this is a feasible strategy. Fortunately using a throwing debug handler solves
these issues.
Additionally this patch rewrites the documentation for debug mode.
llvm-svn: 290651
It's an internal function and shouldn't be exported. It's also a source
of discrepancy in the published ABI list; these symbols aren't exported
for me on CentOS 7 or Ubuntu 16.04, leading to spurious check-cxx-abilist
failures.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27153
llvm-svn: 290503
When libcxx isn't building with an installed LLVM we copy the libcxx headers into the LLVM build directory so that a clang in that build tree can find the headers relative to itself.
This is only important in situations where you don't have headers installed under /, which is common these days on Darwin.
llvm-svn: 289963
This patch reverts the changes to tuple which fixed construction from
types derived from tuple. It breaks the code mentioned in llvm.org/PR31384.
I'll follow this commit up with a test case.
llvm-svn: 289773
In list::remove we collect the nodes we're removing in a seperate
list instance. However we construct this list using the default
constructor which default constructs the allocator. However allocators
are not required to be default constructible. This patch fixes the
construction of the second list.
llvm-svn: 289735
test/std/containers/container.adaptors/queue/queue.cons.alloc/ctor_container_alloc.pass.cpp
test/std/containers/container.adaptors/stack/stack.cons.alloc/ctor_container_alloc.pass.cpp
Iterate with C::size_type because that's what operator[] takes.
test/std/containers/sequences/vector/contiguous.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.require/contiguous.pass.cpp
Add static_cast<typename C::difference_type> because that's what the iterator's operator+ takes.
Fixes D27777.
llvm-svn: 289734
Summary:
The standard requires tuple have the following constructors:
```
tuple(tuple<OtherTypes...> const&);
tuple(tuple<OtherTypes...> &&);
tuple(pair<T1, T2> const&);
tuple(pair<T1, T2> &&);
tuple(array<T, N> const&);
tuple(array<T, N> &&);
```
However libc++ implements these as a single constructor with the signature:
```
template <class TupleLike, enable_if_t<__is_tuple_like<TupleLike>::value>>
tuple(TupleLike&&);
```
This causes the constructor to reject types derived from tuple-like types; Unlike if we had all of the concrete overloads, because they cause the derived->base conversion in the signature.
This patch fixes this issue by detecting derived types and the tuple-like base they are derived from. It does this by creating an overloaded function with signatures for each of tuple/pair/array and checking if the possibly derived type can convert to any of them.
This patch fixes [PR17550]( https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=17550)
This patch
Reviewers: mclow.lists, K-ballo, mpark, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27606
llvm-svn: 289727
No code changes were needed, but I updated a few tests.
Also resolved P0509 and P0521, which required no changes to the library or tests.
This patch was reverted due to llvm.org/PR31016. There is a bug in Clang 3.7
which causes default.pass.cpp to fails. That test is now marked as XFAIL for that
clang version.
This patch was originally authored by Marshall Clow.
llvm-svn: 289708
After r289363, these tests were triggering MSVC x64 warning C4267
"conversion from 'size_t' to 'int', possible loss of data" by taking 0, 2, and 10
as std::size_t, then constructing error_code(int, const error_category&) or
error_condition(int, const error_category&) from that (N4618 19.5.3.2
[syserr.errcode.constructors]/3, 19.5.4.2 [syserr.errcondition.constructors]/3).
The fix is simple: take these ints as int, pass them to the int-taking
constructor, and perform a value-preserving static_cast<std::size_t>
when comparing them to `std::size_t result`.
Fixes D27691.
llvm-svn: 289512
Certain source control systems like to set the read-only bit on their files,
which interferes with opening "test.dat" for both input and output.
Fortunately, we can work around this without losing test coverage.
Now, the ifstream.cons tests have comments referring to the ofstream.cons tests.
There, we're creating writable files (not checked into source control),
where the ifstream constructor tests will succeed.
Fixes D26814.
llvm-svn: 289463