Summary: All supported compilers have rvalues and variadics so we can safely remove the overloads of allocator::construct which are only enabled on compilers without rvalues and variadics.
Reviewers: ldionne, #libc!
Subscribers: dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80068
Summary: All supported compilers have rvalues and variadics so we can safely remove the overloads of allocator::construct which are only enabled on compilers without rvalues and variadics.
Reviewers: ldionne, #libc!
Subscribers: dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80068
Summary: The default constructor for shared_ptr and shared_ptr::__enable_weak_this are both noexcept so, shared_ptr::__create_with_control_block can also be marked noexcept.
Reviewers: ldionne, #libc!
Subscribers: dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80070
Summary: In std::functional moves the reference out of the `__callable` implementation and replaces `_EnableIfCallable` with `_EnableIfLValueCallable` (`_EnableIfLValueCallable` passes `__callable` an lvalue reference type).
Reviewers: ldionne, #libc!
Subscribers: dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80071
These two tests were clumsily using time measurements to determine
whether std::lock_guard was working correctly. In practice, this
approach merely verified that the underlying lock properly waits.
Now these two tests verify that lock is acquired, not dropped
prematurely, and finally, actually dropped at the end of the scope.
Like other uses of ALLOW_RETRIES, this test tried to verify that an API
returned "quickly" but quick is not safe to define given slow and/or
busy machines.
Instead, we now verify that these "wait" APIs actually wait, which the
old test did not.
* improve coverage in `span`'s "conversion from `std::array`" test, while eliminating MSVC diagnostics about `testConstructorArray<T>() && testConstructorArray<const T, T>()` being redundant when `T` is already `const`.
* Remove use of `is_assignable` that triggers UB due to an insufficiently-complete type argument in `std::function`'s assignment operator test.
* Don't test that `shared_ptr` initialization from an rvalue triggers the lvalue aliasing constructor on non-libc++; this is not the case for Standard Libraries that implement LWG-2996. (Ditto, I'd simply remove this but it's your library ;).)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80030
We already set it using -rpath when linking test executables, and using
DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH causes problems when running other commands that
shouldn't run against the just-built libc++ (e.g. `ls` in a ShTest).
rdar://63241847
Since we're using the new testing format, DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH is not passed
to the compiler -- it's only passed to the programs we run as an argument
to the %{exec} substitution.
This is already handled by setting cxx_runtime_root instead -- I don't
see a reason to have two ways of setting the runtime path of the library
we're running against.
Because of Python's funny scoping rules with lambdas, we were always
using the value of `macro` as set in the last iteration of the loop.
This problem was introduced by e7bdfba4f0.
Otherwise, specifying (for example) the libc++.dylib from macos10.13
but the libc++abi.dylib from macos10.12 would end up adding library
paths for both the 10.12 and 10.13 dylibs, which would each contain
a copy of both libc++abi.dylib and libc++.dylib. By using a separate
directory for libc++.dylib and libc++abi.dylib, those do not conflict
anymore.
The back-deployment roots were updated to match this change.
This implements the relaxed requirements on the std::array constructors of span,
where the type only needs to be convertible to the element type of the span.
Note that the previous tests were not sufficient, as the const array<T, n> constructor
was only tested for compile time and the array<T, N> only during runtime.
Restructure the tests so that we can test conversions as well as both constructors.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75706
The default constructor of a static span requires _Extent == 0 so
SFINAE it out rather than using a static_assert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71994
unistd.h isn't guaranteed to exist when the target isn't Windows, in
particular if the target is bare-metal (i.e. no operating system).
Handle this by using __has_include instead, though in
filesystem/operations.cpp we already unconditionally include it so
just remove the extra include.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79784
These two tests do not use the "thread sleeps X milliseconds" pattern
that other libcxx tests use, so all we can do in order to remove
ALLOW_RETRIES workaround is remove the assumption that measuring the
"quick" return of `wait()` is possible (it is not). Let the test harness
verify overall that `wait()` does not hang.
As a bonus, have the spin-waiting threads `yield()`, which is what well
behaved code should do.
When grepping for unused features in the test suite, we will now find
those features and where they are defined, as opposed to thinking they
are dead features.
This test tried to verify that "wait()" returned quickly but "quick" is
impossible to define given a busy and/or slow system.
Instead, I've refactored the test to verify that `wait()` actually
waits which the old test did not verify.
Summary:
This LWG issue states that the result of `year_month_day_last::day()` is implementation defined if `ok()` is `false`.
However, from user perspective, calling `day()` in this situation will lead to a (possibly difficult to find) crash.
Hence, I have added an assertion to warn user at least when assertions are enabled.
I am however not aware of the libc++ stand on the desired behaviour.
Reviewers: ldionne, mclow.lists, EricWF, #libc
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70346
Implements P0414R2:
* Adds support for array types in std::shared_ptr.
* Adds reinterpret_pointer_cast for shared_ptr.
Re-committing now that the leaking tests are fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62259
Operating systems are best effort by default, so we cannot assume that
sleep-like APIs return as soon as we'd like.
Even if a sleep-like API returns when we want it to, the potential for
preemption means that attempts to measure time are subject to delays.
Implements P0414R2:
* Adds support for array types in std::shared_ptr.
* Adds reinterpret_pointer_cast for shared_ptr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62259
Operating systems are best effort by default, so we cannot assume that
sleep-like APIs return as soon as we'd like.
Even if a sleep-like API returns when we want it to, the potential for
preemption means that attempts to measure time are subject to delays.
The challenge with measuring time in tests is that slow and/or busy
machines can cause tests to fail in unexpected ways. After this change,
three tests should be much more robust. The only remaining and tiny race
that I can think of is preemption after `--countDown`. That being said,
the race isn't fixable because the standard library doesn't provide a
way to count threads that are waiting to acquire a lock.
Reviewers: ldionne, EricWF, howard.hinnant, mclow.lists, #libc
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Subscribers: dexonsmith, jfb, broadwaylamb, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79406
This commit should will break libc++ without local submodule visibility, but
the LLVM+modules bots are now all using this mode. Before the Green Dragon
LLDB bot was failing to compile with a libc++ built with this commit as LSV
was disabled on macOS.
Original summary:
libc++ is careful to not fracture overload sets. When one overload
is visible to a user, all of them should be. Anything less causes
subtle bugs and ODR violations.
Previously, in order to support ::abs and ::div being supplied by
both <cmath> and <cstdlib> we had to do awful things that make
<math.h> and <stdlib.h> have header cycles and be non-modular.
This really breaks with modules.
Specifically the problem was that in C++ ::abs introduces overloads
for floating point numbers, these overloads forward to ::fabs,
which are defined in math.h. Therefore ::abs needed to be in math.h
too. But this required stdlib.h to include math.h and math.h to
include stdlib.h.
To avoid these problems the definitions have been moved to stddef.h
(which math includes), and the floating point overloads of ::abs
have been changed to call __builtin_fabs, which both Clang and GCC
support.
This change adds test coverage for the `codecvt<char16_t, char8_t, mbstate_t>` and `codecvt<char32_t, char8_t, mbstate_t>` ctype facets added to the C++20 WD by [P0482R6](https://wg21.link/P0428R6). Note that libc++ does not implement these facets despite implementing the remainder of P0482, presumably for ABI reasons, so these tests are marked `UNSUPPORTED: libc++`.
The ostream operator<< is currently broken for std::complex with
specified field widths.
This patch a partial revert of c3478eff7a (reviewed as D71214),
restoring the correct behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78816
clock_gettime is documented to be available when _POSIX_TIMERS is
defined. Add a check for this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79305
These tests fail due to a couple of changes to `move_iterator` for C++20:
* `move_iterator<I>::operator++(int)` returns `void` in C++20 if `I` doesn't model `forward_iterator`.
* `move_iterator<I>::reference` is calculated in C++20, so `I` must actually have an `operator*() const`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79343
This patch adds deduction guides to <memory> to allow deducing
construction of shared_ptrs from unique_ptrs, and from weak_ptrs
and vice versa, as specified by C++17.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69603