pair, and a couple of pair-like implementation detail types. The
C++98/03 and 11 standards all specify that the copy constructor of
pair<int, int> is trivial. However as libc++ tracked the draft C++11
standard over the years, this copy constructor became non-trivial, and
then just recently was corrected back to trivial for C++11.
Unfortunately (for libc++1) the Itanium ABI specifies different calling
conventions for trivial and non-trivial copy constructors. Therefore
currently the C++03 libc++ copy constructor for pair<int, int> is ABI
incompatible with the C++11 libc++ copy constructor for pair<int, int>.
This is Bad(tm). This patch corrects the situation by making this copy
constructor trivial in C++03 mode as well.
Just in case it is needed for an incomplete C++11 compiler, libc++
retains the ability to support pair with rvalue references, but without
defaulted special members. However the pair needs non-trivial special
members to implement this special case, (as it did when clang was in
this place a couple of years ago).
During this work a bug was also found and fixed in
is_trivially_constructible.
And there is a minor drive-by fix in <__config> regarding
__type_visibility__.
A test is updated to ensure that the copy constructor of pair<int, int>
is trivial in both C++03 and C++11. This test will necessarily fail for
a compiler that implements rvalue references but not defaulted special
members.
llvm-svn: 194536
section in libc++. This requires a recompiled dylib. Failure to rebuild
the dylib will result in a link-time error if and only if the functions from
[util.smartptr.shared.atomic] are used.
The implementation is not lock free. After considerable thought, I know of no
way to make the implementation lock free. Ideas welcome along that front. But
changing the ABI of shared_ptr is not on the table at this point.
The mutex used to lock these function is encapsulated by std::__sp_mut. The
only thing the client knows about std::__sp_mut is that it has a void* data
member, can't be constructed, and has lock and unlock members. Within the
binary __sp_mut is currently implemented as a pointer to a std::mutex. That can
change in the future without disturbing the ABI (as long as sizeof(__sp_mut)
remains constant.
I specifically did not make __sp_mut a spin lock as I have a pathological
distrust of spin locks. Testing on OS X reveals that the use of std::mutex in
this role is not a large performance penalty as long as the contention for the
mutex is low (more likely to get the lock than to have to wait). In the future
we can still make __sp_mut a spin lock if that is what is desired (without ABI
damage).
The dylib contains 16 __sp_mut's to be chosen based on the hash of the address
of the shared_ptr. The constant 16 is a ball-park reasonable space/time
tradeoff.
std::hash<T*> was changed to call __murmur2_or_cityhash, instead of the identity
function. I had thought we had already done this, but I was mistaken.
All of this is under #if __has_feature(cxx_atomic) even though the
implementation is not lock free, because the signatures require access to
std::memory_order, which is currently available only under
__has_feature(cxx_atomic).
llvm-svn: 160940
Objective-C Automatic Reference Counting, where Objective-C object
pointers can have several different qualifiers (__strong, __weak,
__autoreleasing, __unsafe_unretained). These addressof() overloads are
only provided in ARC mode, and the __weak variant is conditionalized
on having weak-reference support in the ARC runtime.
For historical reasons, Clang provides these definitions itself, and
defines the macro _LIBCPP_PREDEFINED_OBJC_ARC_ADDRESSOF to note when
it as done so. The code belongs here, and this redundancy will be
eliminated in the future.
Addresses <rdar://problem/9658274>.
llvm-svn: 133656