According to [1], forms 2 and 4 of std::is_permutation should use the passed in
binary predicate to compare elements. operator== should only be used for forms
1 and 3 which do not take a binary predicate.
This CL fixes forms 2 and 4 which relied on operator== for some comparisons.
[1] http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/algorithm/is_permutation
Patch by Thomas Anderson!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42518
llvm-svn: 323563
We need to use the vcruntime declarations on Windows to avoid an
ODR violation involving rtti.obj, which provides the definition of
the runtime function implementing dynamic_cast and depends on the
vcruntime implementations of bad_cast and bad_typeid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42220
llvm-svn: 323491
Code on Windows expects to be able to do:
#define _USE_MATH_DEFINES
#include <math.h>
and receive the definitions of mathematical constants, even if <math.h>
has previously been included. To support this scenario, re-include
<math.h> every time the wrapper header is included.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42403
llvm-svn: 323490
There was a bug in the implementation of splice where the container
sizes were updated before decrementing one of the iterators. Afterwards,
the result of decrementing the iterator was flagged as UB by the debug
implementation because the container was reported to be empty.
This patch fixes that bug by delaying the updating of the container
sizes until after the iterators have been correctly constructed.
llvm-svn: 323390
Summary:
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=20855
Libc++ goes out of it's way to diagnose `std::tuple` constructions which are UB due to lifetime bugs caused by reference creation. For example:
```
// The 'const std::string&' is created *inside* the tuple constructor, and its lifetime is over before the end of the constructor call.
std::tuple<int, const std::string&> t(std::make_tuple(42, "abc"));
```
However, we are over-aggressive and we incorrectly diagnose cases such as:
```
void foo(std::tuple<int const&, int const&> const&);
foo(std::make_tuple(42, 42));
```
This patch fixes the incorrectly diagnosed cases, as well as converting the diagnostic to use the newly added Clang trait `__reference_binds_to_temporary`. The new trait allows us to diagnose cases we previously couldn't such as:
```
std::tuple<int, const std::string&> t(42, "abc");
```
Reviewers: rsmith, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41977
llvm-svn: 323380
Summary:
Currently when a regular expression contains an invalid character
class name std::regex constructors throw an std::regex_error with
std::regex_constants::error_brack code.
This patch changes the code to std::regex_constants::error_ctype and
adds a test.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42291
llvm-svn: 323322
Some users may have a custom build system which gives a different
name to the libc++ archive (or does not create an archive at all,
instead passing the object files directly to the linker). Give those
users a way to disable auto-linking.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42436
llvm-svn: 323300
The language standard does not define a function with this name,
so it is part of the user's namespace. This change fixes a duplicate
symbol error that occurs when a user attempts to define a function
with this name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42405
llvm-svn: 323237
This is an MSVC standard library extension. It seems like a reasonable
enough extension to me because wchar_t* is the native format for
filenames on that platform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42225
llvm-svn: 323170
This allows us to avoid polluting the namespace of users of <thread>
with the definitions in windows.h.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42214
llvm-svn: 323169
The specification of this function mandates a cast to uninitialized
T*, which is forbidden under CFI.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42146
llvm-svn: 322744
Inline the provided "fallback" definitions (which seem to always be
taken) that expand to __cdecl into users. The fallback definitions
for the *CRTIMP* macros were wrong in the case where the CRT is being
linked statically, so define our own macro as a replacement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42158
llvm-svn: 322617
type 'result_type' to 'double'. The only thing that we ever do with
these numbers is to promote them to 'double' and use them in a division.
For small result_types, the values were getting truncated, skewing the
results. Thanks to James Nagurne for the suggestion.
llvm-svn: 322556
It covers the cases when the sentry object returns false and when an exception
was thrown. Corresponding standard paragraph is C++14 [istream.unformatted]p9:
[...] In any case, if n is greater than zero it then stores a null
character into the next successive location of the array.
rdar://problem/35566567
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40677
llvm-svn: 322326
An application may determine whether the C standard library is glibc
by testing whether __GLIBC_PREREQ is defined. This breaks if libc++
provides its own definition. Instead, define our own macro in our
namespace with the desired semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41892
llvm-svn: 322201
Seems to have broken some tests since I first wrote this a while
back. Will reland after checking what went wrong with the tests.
This reverts commit 7023194c8d11a081fd01ed25308b3d60193c6a06.
llvm-svn: 322039
Summary:
After rL319736 for D28253 (which fixes PR28929), gcc cannot compile `<memory>` anymore in pre-C+11 modes, complaining:
```
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:648:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory: In static member function 'static std::__1::shared_ptr<_Tp> std::__1::shared_ptr<_Tp>::make_shared(_A0&, _A1&, _A2&)':
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory:4365:5: error: wrong number of template arguments (4, should be at least 1)
static_assert((is_constructible<_Tp, _A0, _A1, _A2>::value), "Can't construct object in make_shared" );
^
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:649:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/type_traits:3198:29: note: provided for 'template<class _Tp, class _A0, class _A1> struct std::__1::is_constructible'
struct _LIBCPP_TEMPLATE_VIS is_constructible
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:648:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory:4365:5: error: template argument 1 is invalid
static_assert((is_constructible<_Tp, _A0, _A1, _A2>::value), "Can't construct object in make_shared" );
^
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory: In static member function 'static std::__1::shared_ptr<_Tp> std::__1::shared_ptr<_Tp>::allocate_shared(const _Alloc&, _A0&, _A1&, _A2&)':
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory:4444:5: error: wrong number of template arguments (4, should be at least 1)
static_assert((is_constructible<_Tp, _A0, _A1, _A2>::value), "Can't construct object in allocate_shared" );
^
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:649:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/type_traits:3198:29: note: provided for 'template<class _Tp, class _A0, class _A1> struct std::__1::is_constructible'
struct _LIBCPP_TEMPLATE_VIS is_constructible
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from /usr/include/c++/v1/memory:648:0,
from test.cpp:1:
/usr/include/c++/v1/memory:4444:5: error: template argument 1 is invalid
static_assert((is_constructible<_Tp, _A0, _A1, _A2>::value), "Can't construct object in allocate_shared" );
^
```
This is also reported in https://bugs.freebsd.org/224946 (FreeBSD is apparently one of the very few projects that regularly builds programs against libc++ with gcc).
The reason is that the static assertions are invoking `is_constructible` with three arguments, while gcc does not have the built-in `is_constructible` feature, and the pre-C++11 `is_constructible` wrappers in `<type_traits>` only provide up to two arguments.
I have added additional wrappers for three arguments, modified the `is_constructible` entry point to take three arguments instead, and added a simple test to is_constructible.pass.cpp.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: krytarowski, cfe-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41805
llvm-svn: 321963
This allows keeping libcxx using win32 threads even if a
version of pthread.h is installed.
This matches the existing cmake option LIBCXX_HAS_PTHREAD_API.
Also add missing documentation about the internal define
_LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_API_WIN32.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41764
llvm-svn: 321896
As a result of this change, the basic_stringbuf constructor that
takes a mode ends up leaving __hm_ set to 0, causing the comparison
"__hm_ - __str_.data() < __noff" in seekoff() to succeed, which caused
the function to incorrectly return -1. The fix is to account for the
possibility of __hm_ being 0 when computing the distance from __hm_
to the start of the string.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41319
llvm-svn: 321124
It turns out that this is the only change required in libcxx
for it to compile with the new `wasm32-unknown-unknown-wasm`
target recently added to Clang.
Patch by Nicholas Wilson!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41073
llvm-svn: 320925
Summary:
[libcxx] Fix basic_stringbuf constructor
The C++ Standard [stringbuf.cons]p1 defines the effects of the basic_stringbuf
constructor that takes ios_base::openmode as follows:
Effects: Constructs an object of class basic_stringbuf, initializing the
base class with basic_streambuf(), and initializing mode with which.
Postconditions: str() == "".
The default constructor of basic_streambuf shall initialize all its
pointer member objects to null pointers [streambuf.cons]p1.
Currently libc++ calls "str(string_type());" in the aforementioned constructor
setting basic_streambuf's pointers to a non-null value.
This patch removes the call (note that the postcondition str() == ""
remains valid because __str_ is default-initialized) and adds a test checking
that the basic_streambuf's pointers are null after construction.
Thanks Mikhail Maltsev for the patch.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40707
llvm-svn: 320604
Summary:
Introduce a new form of `result_of` without function type encoding.
Rename and split `is_callable/is_nothrow_callable` into `is_invocable/is_nothrow_invocable/is_invocable_r/is_nothrow_invocable_r` (and associated types accordingly)
Change function type encoding of previous `is_callable/is_nothrow_callable` traits to conventional template type parameter lists.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, bebuch
Reviewed By: EricWF, bebuch
Subscribers: lichray, bebuch, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38831
llvm-svn: 320509
Currently libc++ defines operator== and operator!= as friend functions in the
definition of the istream_iterator class template. Such definition has a subtle
difference from an out-of-line definition required by the C++ Standard: these
functions can only be found by argument-dependent lookup, but not by qualified
lookup.
This patch changes the definition, so that it conforms to the C++ Standard and
adds a check involving qualified lookup to the test suite.
Patch contributed by Mikhail Maltsev.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40415
llvm-svn: 320363
These buildbots are using the deprecated target name install-libcxx-headers
instead of the more up to date install-cxx-headers, so I need to add an
install-libcxx-headers-stripped target to satisfy them.
llvm-svn: 320201
LLVM is gaining install-*-stripped targets to perform stripped installs,
and in order for this to be useful for install-distribution, all
potential distribution components should have stripped installation
targets. LLVM has a function to create these install targets, but since
we can't use LLVM CMake functions in libc++, let's do it manually.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40680
llvm-svn: 319959
The MSVC driver and clang do not link against the C++ runtime
explicitly. Instead, they rely on the auto-linking via the pragma
(through `use_ansi.h`) to link against the correct version of the C++
runtime. Attempt to do something similar here so that linking real C++
code on Windows does not require the user to explicitly specify
`c++.lib` when using libc++ as a C++ runtime on windows.
llvm-svn: 319816
The parameter was previously renamed but MSVC path was not updated.
Patch by Andrey Khalyavin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40774
llvm-svn: 319802
Use this source use on Fuchsia where this is the oficially way
to obtain randomness. This could be also used on other platforms
that already support getentropy such as *BSD or Linux.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40319
llvm-svn: 319523
Fix the problem PR31516 with setting locale on Windows by wrapping
_locale_t with a pointer-like class.
Reduces 74 test failures in std/localization test suite to 47 test
failures (on llvm clang, Visual Studio 2015). Number of test failures
doesn't depend on the platform (x86 or x64).
Patch by Andrey Khalyavin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40181
llvm-svn: 318902
It covers the cases when the sentry object returns false and when an exception
was thrown. Corresponding standard paragraph is C++14 [istream.unformatted]p21:
In any case, if n is greater than zero, it then stores a null character
(using charT()) into the next successive location of the array.
Patch by Reimar Döffinger.
llvm-svn: 318862
One can't replace vsscanf(_l) with a sscanf(_l) that doesn't
take a va_list.
This has been untouched since it was added in SVN r140728, so
apparently it hasn't been used since. One reason for this mistake
originally might have been that there was no _vsscanf_l until MSVC
2015.
Since it's unused, just remove this define.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40323
llvm-svn: 318810
The non-const data() member of std::string is only exposed
in C++17 and beyond. However std::string is externally instantiated
and so the member function needs to be exposed to be externally instantiated.
On Linux and OS X this shouldn't cause a problem, because
_LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY ensures the symbol is always inlined.
However on Windows, the symbol gets marked dllimport, but
there is no definition to import, causing link errors.
llvm-svn: 318690
Summary:
Currently `std::variant` always uses an unsigned int to store the variant index. However this isn't nessesary and causes `std::variant` to be larger than it needs to be in most cases.
This patch changes the index type to be `unsigned char` when possible, and `unsigned short` or `unsigned int` otherwise, depending on the size (Although it's questionable if it's even possible to create a variant with 65535 elements.
Unfortunately this change is an ABI break, and as such is only enabled in ABI v2.
Reviewers: mpark
Reviewed By: mpark
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40210
llvm-svn: 318621
Summary:
In the CHERI clang compiler __output and __input are keywords and therefore
we can't compile libc++ with our compiler.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, theraven
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39537
llvm-svn: 318144
The commit r300140 changed the implementation of compressed_pair, but didn't add
_LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY to the constructors and get members of the
compressed_pair_elem class. This patch adds the visibility annotation.
I didn't find a way to test this change with libc++ regression tests.
rdar://35352579
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39751
llvm-svn: 317816
Summary:
quick_exit() and at_quick_exit() were introduced in android NDK 21:
https://android.googlesource.com/platform/prebuilts/ndk/+/dev/platform/sysroot/usr/include/stdlib.h#55
This CL conditions `_LIBCPP_HAS_QUICK_EXIT` on `__ANDROID_API__ >= 21`. The only place this macro is used is in some using declarations: `using ::quick_exit`, `using ::at_quick_exit`.
Also, add a missing include to sys/cdefs.h which is what defines `__BIONIC__`.
Reviewers: thakis, danalbert, EricWF
Reviewed By: danalbert
Subscribers: srhines, krytarowski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39479
llvm-svn: 317124
LWG 3013 points out that the constructors and increment members
of the directory iterators need to allocate, and therefore cannot
be marked noexcept.
It also points out that `is_empty` and `copy` likely need to allocate
as well, and as such can also not be noexcept.
This patch speculatively implements the resolution removing noexcept,
because libc++ does indeed have the possibility of throwing on allocation
failure.
llvm-svn: 316941
The logic to allocate a node within std::list was repeated
in a bunch of places. This is unneeded. This patch refactors
the shared logic into a single function to reduce duplication.
This patch is part of a set to clean up node construction in
general, but refactoring construction requires some more work
to make it work cleanly in C++03
llvm-svn: 316021
Previously this macro used 0/1 to indicate if it was set.
This is unlike all other libc++ configuration macros which
use ifdef/ifndef.
This patch makes this macro consistent with everything else.
llvm-svn: 315995
Summary:
The constructors `vector(Iter, Iter, Alloc = Alloc{})` and `assign(Iter, Iter)` don't correctly perform EmplaceConstruction from the result of dereferencing the iterator. This results in them performing an additional and unneeded copy.
This patch addresses the issue by correctly using `emplace_back` in C++11 and newer.
There are also some bugs in our `insert` implementation, but those will be handled separately.
@mclow.lists We should probably merge this into 5.1, agreed?
Reviewers: mclow.lists, dlj, EricWF
Reviewed By: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits, mclow.lists
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38757
llvm-svn: 315994
The vcruntime headers are hairy and clash with both libc++ headers
themselves and other libraries. libc++ normally deals with the clashes
by deferring to the vcruntime headers and silencing its own definitions,
but for clients which don't want to depend on vcruntime headers, it's
desirable to support the opposite, i.e. have libc++ provide its own
definitions.
Certain operator new/delete replacement scenarios are not currently
supported in this mode, which requires some tests to be marked XFAIL.
The added documentation has more details.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38522
llvm-svn: 315234
Make it clear that these are intended only to force a specific ABI when
the autodetection would give the wrong result by renaming the cmake
options and adding separate forcing macros, as suggested by EricWF in
the post-commit review of r314949 and further discussed on IRC.
llvm-svn: 314965
libc++'s current heuristic for detecting Itanium vs. Microsoft ABI falls
short in some cases. For example, it will detect windows-itanium targets
as using the Microsoft ABI, since they set `_MSC_VER` (for compatibility
with Microsoft headers). Leave the current heuristic in place by default
but also allow users to explicitly specify the ABI if need be.
llvm-svn: 314949
Some ABI macros affect headers, so it's nice to have a site config
option for them. Add a LIBCXX_ABI_DEFINES cmake macro to allow
specifying a list of ABI macros to define in the site config.
The primary design constraint (as discussed with Eric on IRC a while
back) was to not have to repeat the ABI macro names in cmake, which only
leaves a free-form cmake list as an option. A somewhat unfortunate
consequence is that we can't verify that the ABI macros being defined
actually exist, though we can at least perform some basic sanity
checking, since all the ABI macros begin with _LIBCPP_ABI_.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36719
llvm-svn: 314946
Microsoft's CRT already provides the const overloads, and it defines the
`_CRT_CONST_CORRECT_OVERLOADS` macro to indicate their presence. Check
for this macro before attempting to define our own const-correct
overloads, to avoid compiler warnings about casts dropping const
qualifiers.
llvm-svn: 313377
The RTTI structure is different on Windows when building under MS ABI.
Update the definition to reflect this. The structure itself contains an
area for caching the undecorated name (which is 0-initialized). The
decorated name has a bitfield followed by the linkage name. When
std::type_info::name is invoked for the first time, the runtime should
undecorate the name, cache it, and return the undecorated name. This
requires access to an implementation of __unDName. For now, return
the raw name.
This uses the fnv-1a hash to hash the name of the RTTI. We could use an
alternate hash (murmur? city?), but, this was the quickest to throw
together.
llvm-svn: 313344
There were a number of cases where __double_underscore functions,
for example __has_construct_test, were called without being qualified,
causing ADL to occur. This patch qualifies those calls to avoid this
problem.
Thanks to David L. Jones for point out the issue initially.
llvm-svn: 313324
This patch fixes llvm.org/PR34298. Previously libc++ incorrectly evaluated
the __invokable trait via the converting constructor `function(Tp)` [with Tp = std::function]
whenever the copy constructor or copy assignment operator
was required. This patch further constrains that constructor to short
circut before evaluating the troublesome SFINAE when `Tp` matches
std::function.
The original patch is from Alex Lorenz.
llvm-svn: 312892
This reverts commit r312890 because the test case fails to compile for
older versions of Clang that reject initializing a const object without
a user defined constructor.
Since this patch should go into 5.0.1, I want to keep it an atomic change,
and will re-commit it with a fixed test case.
llvm-svn: 312891
This patch fixes llvm.org/PR34298. Previously libc++ incorrectly evaluated
the __invokable trait via the converting constructor `function(Tp)` [with Tp = std::function]
whenever the copy constructor or copy assignment operator
was required. This patch further constrains that constructor to short
circut before evaluating the troublesome SFINAE when `Tp` matches
std::function.
The original patch is from Alex Lorenz.
llvm-svn: 312890
_strftime_l is only available in the numbered msvcrt versions
(starting from msvcr80.dll). In the default configuration, mingw
targets the unversioned msvcrt.dll - and there, _strftime_l is
not available (not even on windows 10).
If __MSVCRT_VERSION__ is set to a higher value (indicating a
non-default target and wanting to link to msvcrXX.dll), use the
correct function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37468
llvm-svn: 312617
This function template is referenced inside class basic_string as a
friend function. The extern template declaration needs to be above that
friend declaration to actually take effect.
This is important because this function was marked as exported in
r307966, so without the extern template taking effect, it can leak into
other DSOs as a visible symbol.
llvm-svn: 309474
Creating a function pointer with proper parameters pointing to std::next() or std::prev() should work.
This change moves the invented paramater for enable_if over to the return type to resolve this QoI issue.
Patch by Jason Liu.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34649
llvm-svn: 308932
Some targets (e.g. Darwin) might have the Win32 API available, but they
do not use MSVC CRT. Assume _LIBCPP_MSVCRT only when _MSC_VER is available
and __MINGW32__ isn't defined.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34588
rdar://problem/32628786
llvm-svn: 308225
Once upon a time, extern templates used to be a Microsoft extension, so
cl would warn about their usage, and libc++ suppressed that warning.
They've long since been standardized, so the warning is defunct. (libc++
also doesn't currently support building with cl anyway.)
llvm-svn: 307997
It has an extern template instantiation declaration in the headers and a
corresponding instantiation definition in the library, so we must mark
it with _LIBCPP_FUNC_VIS to make it available outside the library.
This doesn't cause any ABI changes as-is since we don't build libc++
with hidden visibility (so the function is exported anyway). It's needed
for building libc++ with hidden visibility, however.
Clarify the Windows behavior for extern function templates while I'm
here, since this exercises that behavior.
llvm-svn: 307966
When using LIBCXX_ABI_UNSTABLE=YES, clang-cl gave the following warning:
P:\llvm_master\src\llvm\projects\libcxx\include\string(683,51):
warning: enumerator value is not representable in the underlying type
'int' [-Wmicrosoft-enum-value]
Fixed by switching from enums to static const size_type.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D35174
llvm-svn: 307751
The libc++ <__refstring> headers has no real reason why it should
be a public header that libc++ ships. The only reason it was in the include
directory was because libc++abi needed it to build the library.
However keeping <__refstring> a header had other problems, like requiring its
dependancies to also be in the headers. For that reason this patch
moves it into the source directory.
To work around libc++abi's need for this header a duplicated copy was added
to libc++abi in r307748. While duplicating the code is an unfortunate solution
it's the best solution that's currently possible.
In the future I would like to start a discussion on the mailing lists about
making libc++abi build as a sub-project of libc++, requiring the libc++ sources
always be present.
llvm-svn: 307749
This is going to be used by the runtime build in the multi-target
setup to allow using different install prefix for each target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33762
llvm-svn: 307615
r283051 added some functions to cmath (in namespace std) that have the
same name as functions in math.h (in the global namespace). Clang's
limited support for `-fdelayed-template-parsing` chokes on this. Rename
the ones in `cmath` and their uses in `complex` and the test.
rdar://problem/32848355
llvm-svn: 307357
This reverts commit r306310.
r306310 causes clang to reject a call to an aligned allocation or
deallocation function if it is not implemented in the standard library
of the deployment target. This is not the desired behavior when users
have defined their own aligned functions.
rdar://problem/32664169
llvm-svn: 306859
The string literal operators have implicit instantiations of
basic_string<char> and basic_string<wchar>, which prevent the dllimport
on the subsequent explicit instantiation declarations from having an
effect. Hoisting the explicit instantiations above the implicit ones
fixes the issue.
I think it's pretty unfortunate that the ordering has such an effect,
and I'd fixed the same issue for dllexport in r288682. dllimport is more
complicated from a codegen perspective, however, and clang's behavior of
ignoring the dllimport when there's a previous implicit instantiation is
consistent with cl, so changing the order is our only recourse.
llvm-svn: 306632
attribute.
This is needed because older versions of libc++ do not have these
operators. If users target an older deployment target and try to compile
programs in which these operators are explicitly called, the compiler
will complain.
The following is the list of minimum deployment targets for the four
OSes:
macosx: 10.13
ios: 11.0
tvos: 11.0
watchos: 4.0
rdar://problem/32664169
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34556
llvm-svn: 306310
Remarks: This function shall not participate in overload resolution unless
`is_same_v<decay_t<T>, variant>` is false, unless `decay_t<T>` is
neither a specialization of `in_place_type_t` nor a specialization of
`in_place_index_t`, unless `is_constructible_v<Tj, T>` is true, and
unless the expression `FUN(std::forward<T>(t))` (with `FUN` being the
above-mentioned set of imaginary functions) is well formed.
Depends on D34111.
Reviewers: EricWF, K-ballo
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34112
llvm-svn: 305668
Fix an off-by-one in r302172, which triggered building local versions of
the iostreams when deploying to `<= macOS 10.9`, when it should have
been `< macOS 10.9`. 10.9 had the dylib support.
This defines `_LIBCPP_AVAILABILITY_NO_STREAMS_EXTERN_TEMPLATE` less
often, reducing code size for users with deployment targets of exactly
macOS 10.9 or iOS 7.0.
rdar://problem/32233981
llvm-svn: 305649
C99 at least. C89 still fails due to the use of block comments.
NOTE: Having libc++ on the include path when compiling C is not
recommended or ever really supported. However it happens often
enough that this change is warrented.
llvm-svn: 305539
It seems conceivable that a user would need to get a coroutine handle
having only a const reference to the promise_type, for example from
within a const member function of the promise.
This patch allows that use case. A coroutine_handle<const T> can be used
in essentially the same way a coroutine_handle<T>, ie to start and destroy
the coroutine. The constness of the promise doesn't/shouldn't propagate
to the handle.
llvm-svn: 305536
The function num_get<_CharT>::stage2_int_prep makes unnecessary copy of src
into atoms when char_type is char. This can be avoided by creating
a switch on type and just returning __src when char_type is char.
Added the test case to demonstrate performance improvement.
In order to avoid ABI incompatibilities, the changes are guarded
with a macro _LIBCPP_ABI_OPTIMIZED_LOCALE_NUM_GET
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30268
Reviewed by: EricWF
llvm-svn: 305427
Newlib 2.5 added the locale management functions, so it should not
include __nop_local_mgmt.h. This change adds proper guard around that
include statement.
For newlib 2.4, some releases contain these functions and some don't,
and they all have the same version numbers. This patch will work
properly with the initial "2.4.0" release which does not include these
functions and require __nop_local_mgmt.h.
This has been tested against newlib 2.2 and 2.5, and also sanity
checks against other different version numbers.
Patch by Martin J. O'Riordan and Walter Lee
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32146
llvm-svn: 305394
r304862 changed how CTD handles deducing a non-primary class template
using a non-dependent constructor of the primary template. This change
requires libc++ to provide explicit deduction guides to make scoped_lock
work again.
llvm-svn: 304955
On Bionic PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER contains the expression "<enum-type> & <integer-type>",
which causes ADL to perform name lookup for operator&. During this lookup Clang decides
that it requires the default member initializer for std::mutex while defining the DMI
for std::mutex::__m_.
If I'm not mistaken this is caused by the explicit noexcept declaration on the defaulted
constructor.
This patch removes the explicit noexcept and instead allows the compiler to declare
the default constructor implicitly noexcept. It also adds a static_assert to ensure
that happens.
Unfortunatly because it's not easy to change the value of _LIBCPP_MUTEX_INITIALIZER
for a single test there is no good way to test this patch.
The Clang behavior causing the trouble here was introduced in r287713, which first
appears in the 4.0 release.
llvm-svn: 304942
Summary:
- Removed the move-constructibe requirement from copy-assignable.
- Updated `__assign_alt` such that we direct initialize if
`_Tp` can be `nothrow`-constructible from `_Arg`, or `_Tp`'s
move construction can throw. Otherwise, construct a temporary and move it.
- Updated the tests to remove the pre-LWG2904 path.
Depends on D32671.
Reviewers: EricWF, CaseyCarter
Reviewed By: EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33965
llvm-svn: 304891
Summary:
This patch improves how libc++ handles min/max macros within the headers. Previously libc++ would undef them and emit a warning.
This patch changes libc++ to use `#pragma push_macro` to save the macro before undefining it, and `#pragma pop_macro` to restore the macros and the end of the header.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, bcraig, compnerd, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits, krytarowski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33080
llvm-svn: 304357
from_address requires that the provided pointer refer to the suspended coroutine,
which doesn't have a type, or at least not one knowable by the user. Therefore
every use of `from_address` with a typed pointer is almost certainly a bug.
This behavior is a part of the TS specification, but hopefully it will be
in the future.
llvm-svn: 304172
More tests to come. I think that from_address overload should be deleted
or ill-formed, except for the 'void*' one; The user cannot possibly
have a typed pointer to the coroutine state.
llvm-svn: 304131
Clang supports coroutines in all dialects; Therefore libc++ should too,
otherwise the Clang extension is unusable.
I'm not convinced extending support to C++03 is a feasible long term
plan, since as the library grows to offer things like generators it
will be come increasingly difficult to limit the implementation to C++03.
However for the time being supporting C++03 isn't a big deal.
llvm-svn: 303963
Clang started providing -fcoroutines and defining __cpp_coroutines
way before it implemented the __builtin_coro_foo functions. This
means that simply checking if __cpp_coroutines is not a sufficient
way of detecting the actual feature.
This patch implements _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_COROUTINES which implements
a slightly more complex feature check. Specifically it requires
__cpp_coroutines >= 201703L, which only holds for Clang 5.0 built
after 2017/05/24.
llvm-svn: 303956
The original issues were caused because <experimental/coroutine>
didn't correctly #ifdef out enough of the header, which caused incomplete
types to be used.
This patch fixes the `#if defined(__cpp_coroutines)` guard and re-adds
the headers to the module map.
It also uglifies some incorrectly non-reserved names.
llvm-svn: 303936
This patch updates the promise() member to match the current spec.
Specifically it removes the non-const overload and make the return
type of the const overload non-const.
This patch also makes the ASSERT_NOT_NOEXCEPT tests libc++ specific,
since other implementations may be free to strengthen the specification.
llvm-svn: 303895
This patch removes the clear() member from <string_view>. The
modifier was removed from the TS before it ever landed in the standard.
There is no reason libc++ should be providing this method.
llvm-svn: 302869
Some MinGW configurations use WinPThread instead of the native
threading interfaces. When this happens libc++ doesn't build because
it tries to use the wrong threading API.
This patch attempts to correctly detect and enable pthreads; Selecting
them when __MINGW32__ is defined and __has_include(<pthread.h>) is true.
I'm not sure if this works correctly 100% of the time but it seemed
like the most correct approach available.
llvm-svn: 302734
This patch follows up on feedback received in the review for
D32988. Specifically that libc++ should not mess with the
__builtin namespace, and that libc++ should use __popcnt to implement
__pop_count under MSVC.
llvm-svn: 302731
Summary:
This patch refactors and tries to remove as much of the Windows support headers as possible. This is needed because they currently introduce super weird include cycles and dependencies between STL and libc headers.
The changes in this patch are:
* remove `support/win32/support.h` completely. The required parts have either been moved into `support/win32/msvc_support.h` (for `MSVC` only helpers not needed by Clang), or directly into their respective `foo.h` headers.
* Combine `locale_win32.h` and `locale_mgmt_win32.h` into a single headers, this header should only be included within `__locale` or `locale` to avoid include cycles.
* Remove the unneeded parts of `limits_win32.h` and re-name it to `limits_msvc_win32.h` since it's only needed by Clang.
I've tested this patch using Clang on Windows, but I suspect it might technically regress our non-existent support for MSVC. Is somebody able to double check?
This refactor is needed to support upcoming fixes to `<locale>` on Windows.
Reviewers: bcraig, rmaprath, compnerd, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: majnemer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32988
llvm-svn: 302727
Summary:
This patch fixes bugs.llvm.org/PR32979.
[util.smartptr.shared.const] says:
> In the constructor definitions below, enables shared_from_this with p, for a pointer p of type Y*, means
> that if Y has an unambiguous and accessible base class that is a specialization of enable_shared_from_-
> this.
This means that libc++ needs to respect the access specifier of the base class, and not attempt to construct
and enabled_shared_from_this base if it is private. However access specifiers don't affect overload resolution
so our current implementation will attempt to construct the private base.
This patch uses SFINAE to correctly detect if the shared_ptr input has an accessible enable_shared_from_this
base class.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Reviewed By: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33033
llvm-svn: 302709
This patch fixes the test failures and unexpected passes that occur
when testing against GCC 7. Specifically:
* don't mark __gcd as always inline because it's a recursive function. GCC diagnoses this.
* don't XFAIL the aligned allocation tests. GCC 7 supports them but not the -faligned-allocation option.
* Work around gcc.gnu.org/PR78489 in variants constructors.
llvm-svn: 302488
Previously <locale> used std::unique_ptr<remove_ptr<locale_t>, locale-mgmt-function>
as a scope guard for (A) creating new locales, and (B) setting the thread specific locale
in RAII safe manner.
However using unique_ptr has some problems, first it requires that locale_t is a pointer
type, which may not be the case (Windows will need a non-pointer locale_t type that emulates _locale_t).
The second problem is that users of the guards had to supply the locale management function to the custom
deleter at every call site. However these locale management functions don't exist natively Windows, making
a good Windows implementation of locale more difficult.
This patch creates distinct and simply RAII guards that replace unique_ptr. These guards handle calling
the correct locale management function so that callers don't have too. This simplification will
aid in upcoming Windows fixes.
llvm-svn: 302474
Summary:
This patch implements exception_ptr on Windows using the `__ExceptionPtrFoo` functions provided by MSVC.
The `__ExceptionPtrFoo` functions are defined inside the C++ standard library, `msvcprt`, which is unfortunate because it requires libc++ to link to the MSVC STL. However this doesn't seem to cause any immediate problems. However to be safe I kept all usages within the libc++ dylib so that user programs wouldn't have to link to MSVCPRT as well.
Note there are still 2 outstanding exception_ptr/nested_exception test failures.
* `current_exception.pass.cpp` needs to be rewritten for the Windows exception_ptr semantics which copy the exception every time.
* `rethrow_if_nested.pass.cpp` need investigation. It hits a stack overflow, likely from recursion.
This patch also gets most of the `<future>` tests passing as well.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, compnerd, bcraig, rmaprath, majnemer, BillyONeal, STL_MSFT
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32927
llvm-svn: 302393
Summary:
In https://bugs.freebsd.org/207918, Daniel McRobb describes how using
std::showbase with ostreams can cause truncation of unsigned long long
when output format is octal. In fact, this can even happen with
unsigned int and unsigned long.
To ensure this does not happen, add one additional character to the
do_put buffers if std::showbase is on. Also add a test case.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32670
llvm-svn: 302362
The ERROR_TIMEDOUT returned by the Windows API does not
have the same value as ETIMEDOUT. This caused condition_variable
to return timeouts as unknown errors.
llvm-svn: 302297
Libc++ is used as a system library on macOS and iOS (amongst others). In order
for users to be able to compile a binary that is intended to be deployed to an
older version of the platform, clang provides the
availability attribute <https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#availability>_
that can be placed on declarations to describe the lifecycle of a symbol in the
library.
See docs/DesignDocs/AvailabilityMarkup.rst for more information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31739
llvm-svn: 302172
Summary: Seemed to have been overlooked in D24028.
This bug was found and brought to my attention by Paul Wankadia.
Reviewers: kubamracek, EricWF, dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32402
llvm-svn: 301132
For std::isinf, the standard requires effectively calling isinf as
double from Libc for integral types. But integral types are never
infinite; we don't need to call Libc to return false.
Also short-circuit other functions where Libc won't have interesting
answers: signbit, fpclassify, isfinite, isnan, and isnormal.
I added correctness tests for integral types since we're no longer
deferring to Libc.
In review it was pointed out that in future revisions of the C++
standard we may add more types to std::is_arithmetic (e.g.,
std::is_fixed_point). I'll leave it to a future commit to hack this to
allow using math functions on those. We'll need to change things like
__libcpp_fpclassify anyway, so I'm not sure anything here would really
be future-proof.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D31561
rdar://problem/31361223
llvm-svn: 301060
Previously the ATOMIC_<TYPE>_LOCK_FREE macros were implemented
using __GCC_ATOMIC_<TYPE>_LOCK_FREE but GCC specific macros
are defined when -fms-compatibility is specified.
To avoid this Libc++ now tries to use the newly added
__CLANG_ATOMIC_<TYPE>_LOCK_FREE macros instead, and only falls
back to the GCC versions when the Clang ones aren't available.
llvm-svn: 300920