Back in r240527 I added a knob to prevent thread-unsafe functions from
being exposed. mblen(), mbtowc() and wctomb() were also added to this
list, as the latest issue of POSIX doesn't require these functions to be
thread-safe.
It turns out that the only circumstance in which these functions are not
thread-safe is in case they are used in combination with state-dependent
character sets (e.g., Shift-JIS). According to Austin Group Bug 708,
these character sets "[...] are mostly a relic of the past and which
were never supported on most POSIX systems".
Though in many cases the use of these functions can be prevented by
using the reentrant counterparts, they are the only functions that allow
you to query whether the locale's character set is state-dependent. This
means that omitting these functions removes actual functionality.
Let's be a bit less pedantic and drop the guards around these functions.
Links:
http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=708http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2037.htm
Reviewed by: ericwf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21436
llvm-svn: 290748
test/std/depr/depr.c.headers/inttypes_h.pass.cpp
test/std/input.output/file.streams/c.files/cinttypes.pass.cpp
test/std/input.output/iostream.forward/iosfwd.pass.cpp
Add test() to avoid a bunch of void-casts, although we still need a few.
test/std/input.output/iostream.format/quoted.manip/quoted.pass.cpp
skippingws was unused (it's unclear to me whether this was mistakenly copy-pasted from round_trip() below).
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.collate/locale.collate/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/facet.ctype.special/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/locale.codecvt/types_char.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/locale.codecvt/types_wchar_t.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.ctype/locale.ctype/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/facet.numpunct/locale.numpunct/types.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locales/locale.global.templates/use_facet.pass.cpp
When retrieving facets, the references are unused.
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.numeric/locale.nm.put/facet.num.put.members/put_long.pass.cpp
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.numeric/locale.nm.put/facet.num.put.members/put_unsigned_long.pass.cpp
"std::ios_base::iostate err = ios.goodbit;" was completely unused here.
test/std/localization/locale.categories/category.time/locale.time.get/time_base.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/c.math/ctgmath.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.device/entropy.pass.cpp
test/std/numerics/rand/rand.device/eval.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.modifiers/string_copy/copy.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char16_t/eof.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char32_t/eof.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/futures/futures.promise/dtor.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/futures/futures.task/futures.task.members/dtor.pass.cpp
test/std/thread/thread.condition/thread.condition.condvar/wait_for_pred.pass.cpp
These variables are verifying types but are otherwise unused.
test/std/strings/basic.string/string.capacity/reserve.pass.cpp
old_cap was unused (it's unclear to me whether it was intended to be used).
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char16_t/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char16_t/lt.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char32_t/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.char32_t/lt.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.wchar.t/eq.pass.cpp
test/std/strings/char.traits/char.traits.specializations/char.traits.specializations.wchar.t/lt.pass.cpp
These tests contained unused characters.
llvm-svn: 286847
Summary:
GLIBC recently removed the incorrect `int isinf(double)` and `int isnan(double)` overloads in C++11 and greater. This causes previously `XFAIL: linux` tests to start passing.
Since there is no longer a way to 'XFAIL' the tests I choose to simply tolerate this bug.
See https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19439
Reviewers: rsmith, mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: jroelofs, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19835
llvm-svn: 271060
<string.h> and wcschr, wcspbrk, wcsrchr, wmemchr, and wcsstr from <wchar.h> to
provide a const-correct overload set even when the underlying C library does
not.
This change adds a new macro, _LIBCPP_PREFERRED_OVERLOAD, which (if defined)
specifies that a given overload is a better match than an otherwise equally
good function declaration without the overload. This is implemented in modern
versions of Clang via __attribute__((enable_if)), and not elsewhere.
We use this new macro to define overloads in the global namespace for these
functions that displace the overloads provided by the C library, unless we
believe the C library is already providing the correct signatures.
llvm-svn: 260337
The initial buildbot run found a few missing bits in the initial XFAIL list
for the no-exceptions libc++ variant. These discrepancies are as follows:
[1] Following two tests need XFAILs on the no-exceptions library variant.
My local runs had these two disabled for other reasons (unsupported):
- localization/locales/locale/locale.cons/char_pointer.pass.cpp
- numerics/complex.number/complex.ops/complex_divide_complex.pass.cpp
[2] These three does not need XFAILs, they were failing on my local runs for
other reasons:
- depr/depr.c.headers/uchar_h.pass.cpp
- input.output/iostreams.base/ios/basic.ios.members/copyfmt.pass.cpp
- .../category.collate/locale.collate.byname/transform.pass.cpp
(these are failing on my box for the default build as well)
The current patch fixes both the cases above. Additionally, I've run the
following scan to make sure I've covered all the cases:
> grep ' catch \| try \| throw ' -R . | perl -pe 's|(.*?):.*|\1|' | sort | \
uniq > 1.txt
> grep 'libcpp-no-exceptions' -R . | perl -pe 's|(.*?):.*|\1|' | sort | \
uniq > 2.txt
> diff 1.txt 2.txt
This showed up a few extra interesting cases:
[3] These two tests do not use try/catch/throw statements, but they fail at
runtime. Need to be investigated, I've left the XFAILs in.
- std/thread/futures/futures.shared_future/dtor.pass.cpp
- std/thread/futures/futures.unique_future/dtor.pass.cpp
[4] These tests use a macro named TEST_HAS_NO_EXCEPTIONS to conditionally
exclude try/catch/throw statements when running without exceptions. I'm not
entirely sure why this was needed (AFAIK, we didn't have a no-exceptions
library build before). The macro's defintion is quite similar to that of
_LIBCPP_NO_EXCEPTIONS. I will investigate if this can be reused for my test
fixes or if it should be replaced with _LIBCPP_NO_EXCEPTIONS.
- std/experimental/any/*
Change-Id: I9ad1e0edd78f305406eaa0ab148b1ab693f7e26a
llvm-svn: 252870
Fixes a small omission in libcxx that prevents libcxx being built when
-DLIBCXX_ENABLE_EXCEPTIONS=0 is specified.
This patch adds XFAILS to all those tests that are currently failing
on the new -fno-exceptions library variant. Follow-up patches will
update the tests (progressively) to cope with the new library variant.
Change-Id: I4b801bd8d8e4fe7193df9e55f39f1f393a8ba81a
llvm-svn: 252598
Previously, this resulted in us declaring a template for static_assert emulation within the 'extern "C"' context, which is ill-formed.
llvm-svn: 250247
There are a bunch of macros (__need_size_t etc) that request just one piece of
<stddef.h>; if any one of these is defined, we just directly include the
underlying header.
Note that <stddef.h> provides a ::nullptr_t. We don't want that available to
includers of <cstddef>, so instead of following the usual pattern where <cfoo>
includes <foo.h> then pulls things from :: into std:: with using-declarations,
we implement <stddef.h> and <cstddef> separately; both include <__nullptr> for
the definition of std::nullptr_t.
llvm-svn: 249761
One of the aspects of CloudABI is that it aims to help you write code
that is thread-safe out of the box. This is very important if you want
to write libraries that are easy to reuse. For CloudABI we decided to
not provide the thread-unsafe functions. So far this is working out
pretty well, as thread-unsafety issues are detected really early on.
The following patch adds a knob to libc++,
_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_THREAD_UNSAFE_C_FUNCTIONS, that can be set to disable
thread-unsafe functions that can easily be avoided in practice. The
following functions are not thread-safe:
- <clocale>: locale handles should be preferred over setlocale().
- <cstdlib>: mbrlen(), mbrtowc() and wcrtomb() should be preferred over
their non-restartable counterparts.
- <ctime>: asctime(), ctime(), gmtime() and localtime() are not
thread-safe. The first two are also deprecated by POSIX.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8703
Reviewed by: marshall
llvm-svn: 240527