locale.codecvt.byname/ctor_char.pass.cpp:
This test used to use "en_US" as a plain string instead of using platform_support.
Need to fix this because MS STL expects "en-US" instead.
platform_support.h:
These are the legacy Windows locale names. Should use IETF tags instead.
I've also added en_US, since a test was using that as a locale string as well.
msvc_stdlib_force_include.hpp:
Remove _MSVC_STL_VER. The libraries will directly define _MSVC_STL_VERSION in the future.
Fixes D29351.
llvm-svn: 305000
Also: Move constexpr / triviality extension tests into the std tree and make them conditional on _LIBCPP_VERSION / _MSVC_STL_VERSION.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D32671
llvm-svn: 304847
This macro will instruct MSVC's STL to not warn about features that are deprecated in C++17,
as libcxx tests those features and uses them elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 304765
Was VSO#109062. This bug was filed *4 years ago*. I submitted a workaround to enable the scoped_allocator_adaptor tests to pass. Bug fixed a week and a half later. This was either a waste of my time, or I've discovered that libc++ has magical bugfix-inducing powers. My money's on the latter.
llvm-svn: 304730
This patch adds end-to-end/breathing tests for coroutines
into libc++. The tests aren't specifically to test libc++ requirements
but instead are intented to ensure coroutines are working fine in general.
Although libc++ isn't exactly the most correct place for these tests
to live, there is one major advantage. The libc++ test suite is also
used by MSVC and by adding the tests here it ensures they will be
run against all currently available coroutine implementations.
llvm-svn: 304101
VSO#391542 "Types can't be convertible to nullptr_t"
Also put internal bug numbers on the workarounds in test_workarounds.h for correlation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33290
llvm-svn: 303889
This change works around a couple of bugs:
1. EDG doesn't like explicit constexpr in a derived class. This program:
struct Base {};
struct Derived : Base {
constexpr Derived() = default;
};
triggers "error: defaulted default constructor cannot be constexpr."
2. C1XX with /Za has no idea which constructor needs to be valid for copy elision.
The change also conditionally disables parts of the msvc_stdlib_force_include.hpp header that conflict with external configuration when _LIBCXX_IN_DEVCRT is defined.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32778
llvm-svn: 302707
_HAS_CXX17 indicates whether MSVC's STL is in C++17 mode.
In MSVC there's a distinction between CRT headers like stdlib.h and STL headers
like cstdlib. Only the STL headers drag in yvals.h, our internal STL-wide header
that defines internal macros like _HAS_CXX17.
_HAS_CXX17 is an MSVC STL library macro, unconditionally defined. We centralize
everything on this, because we have to ask different questions to determine
whether C1XX, EDG, or Clang is in 14 or 17 mode, and we additionally permit
users to override the detection in one way (it's okay to ask for 17 from the
compiler, but only 14 from the libs, at least for the moment; only noexcept
in the type system will give us a headache).
As this header is for testing MSVC's STL, we can assume _HAS_CXX17 is defined.
Fixes D32726.
llvm-svn: 302104
This patch overhauls both specializations of unique_ptr while implementing
the following LWG issues:
* LWG 2801 - This issue constrains unique_ptr's constructors when the deleter type
is not default constructible. Additionally it adds SFINAE conditions
to unique_ptr<T[]>::unique_ptr(Up).
* LWG 2905 - This issue reworks the unique_ptr(pointer, /* see below */ deleter)
constructors so that they correctly SFINAE when the deleter argument cannot
be used to construct the stored deleter.
* LWG 2520 - This issue fixes initializing unique_ptr<T[]> from nullptr.
Libc++ had previously implemented this issue, but the suggested resolution
still broke initialization from NULL. This patch re-works the
unique_ptr<T[]>(Up, deleter) overloads so that they accept NULL as well
as nullptr.
llvm-svn: 300406
This patch almost entirely rewrites the unique_ptr tests. There are a couple
of reasons for this:
A) Most of the *.fail.cpp tests were either incorrect or could be better written
as a *.pass.cpp test that uses <type_traits> to check if certain operations
are valid (Ex. Using static_assert(!std::is_copy_constructible_v<T>) instead
of writing a failure test).
B) [unique.ptr.runtime] has very poor test coverage. Many of the constructors
and assignment operators have to tests at all. The special members that have
tests have very few test cases and are typically way out of date.
C) The tests for [unique.ptr.single] and [unique.ptr.runtime] are largely
duplicates of each other. This means common requirements have two different
sets of tests in two different test files. This makes the tests harder to
maintain than if there was a single copy.
To address (A) this patch changes almost all of the *.fail.cpp tests into
.pass.cpp tests using type traits; Allowing the *.fail.cpp tests to be removed.
The address (B) and (C) the tests for [unique.ptr.single] and [unique.ptr.runtime]
have been combined into a single directory, allowing both specializations to share
common tests. Tests specific to the single/runtime specializations are given the
suffix "*.single.pass.cpp" or "*.runtime.pass.cpp".
Finally the unique.ptr test have been moved into the correct directory according
to the standard. Specifically they have been removed from "utilities/memory" into
"utilities/smartptr".
PS. This patch also adds newly written tests for upcoming unique_ptr changes/fixes.
However since these tests don't currently pass they are guarded by the macro
TEST_WORKAROUND_UPCOMING_UNIQUE_PTR_CHANGES. This allows other STL's to validate
the tests before libc++ implements the changes. The relevant libc++ changes should
land in the next week.
llvm-svn: 300388
For reference deleter types the const qualifier on the return type
of get_deleter() should be ignored, and a non-const deleter should
be returned.
This patch fixes a bug where "const deleter_type&" is incorrectly
formed.
llvm-svn: 300121
Summary: This is my attempt to work around the C1XX bug described to me by @BillyONeal.
Reviewers: BillyONeal, STL_MSFT, CaseyCarter
Reviewed By: BillyONeal
Subscribers: cfe-commits, BillyONeal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31260
llvm-svn: 298554
Summary:
This patch fixes http://llvm.org/PR31938. The description below is copy/pasted from the bug:
The standard says:
template<class charT, class traits = char_traits<charT>,
class Allocator = allocator<charT>>
class basic_string {
using value_type = typename traits::char_type;
// ...
basic_string(const charT* s, const Allocator& a = Allocator());
};
libc++ actually chooses to declare the constructor as
basic_string(const value_type* s, const Allocator& a = Allocator());
The implicit deduction guides from class template argument deduction make what was previously an implementation detail visible:
std::basic_string s = "foo"; // error, can't deduce charT.
The constructor in question is in the libc++ DSO, but fortunately it looks like fixing this will not result in an ABI break.
@rsmith How does this look? I did more than just the constructors mentioned in the PR, but IDK how far to take it.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29863
llvm-svn: 295393
libcxx's tests use various C Standard Library functions that have been
marked by MSVC's CRT as deprecated by Microsoft (not by ISO).
libcxx's usage is cromulent (just checking with decltype to see if the functions
are being dragged in by various headers as required by the Standard), so
defining _CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS will silence the warnings in a targeted manner.
This needs to be defined before including any CRT headers.
Also, make this file prettier.
Fixes D29138.
llvm-svn: 294157
Summary:
Exactly what the title says.
This patch also adds a `std::hash<nullptr_t>` specialization in C++17, but it was not added by this paper and I can't find the actual paper that adds it.
See http://wg21.link/P0513R0 for more info.
If there are no comments in the next couple of days I'll commit this
Reviewers: mclow.lists, K-ballo, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28938
llvm-svn: 292684
Summary: This patch adjusts the newly added `msvc_stdlib_force_include.hpp` so that it also works when used with `clang++`.
Reviewers: STL_MSFT
Reviewed By: STL_MSFT
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28917
llvm-svn: 292539
No functional change; nothing includes this, instead our test harness
injects it via the /FI compiler option.
No code review; blessed in advance by EricWF.
llvm-svn: 292443
Summary: This patch allows libc++ to be built against the debug MSVC runtimes instead of just the release ones.
Reviewers: rnk, majnemer, compnerd, smeenai
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28725
llvm-svn: 292006
When -pedantic-errors is specified `__has_extension(<feature>)` is always
false when it would otherwise be true. This causes C++03 <atomic> to break
along with other issues.
This patch avoids the above problem by using __is_identifier(...) instead since
it is not affected by -pedantic-errors. For example instead of checking for
__has_extension(c_atomics) we now check `!__is_identifier(_Atomic)`, which
is only true when _Atomic is not a keyword provided by the compiler.
This patch applies similar changes to the detection logic for __decltype and
__nullptr as well.
Note that it does not apply this change to the C++03
`static_assert` macro since -Wc11-extensions warnings generated by expanding
that macro will appear in user code, and will not be suppressed as part of a
system header.
llvm-svn: 291995
Windows is greedy and it defines the identifier `__out` as a macro.
This patch renames all conflicting libc++ identifiers in order
to correctly work on Windows.
llvm-svn: 291345
Summary:
This patch attempts to clean up the macro configuration mess in `<__threading_support>`, specifically the mess involving external threading variants. Additionally this patch adds design documentation for `<__threading_support>` and the configuration macros it uses.
The primary change in this patch is separating the idea of an "external API" provided by `<__external_threading>` and the idea of having an external threading library. Now `_LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_API_EXTERNAL` means that libc++ should use `<__external_threading>` and that the header is expected to exist. Additionally the new macro `_LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_LIBRARY_EXTERNAL` is now used to configure for using an "external library" with the default threading API.
Reviewers: compnerd, rmaprath
Subscribers: smeenai, cfe-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28316
llvm-svn: 291275
after r290850
Before r290850, building libcxx with -DLIBCXX_HAS_EXTERNAL_THREAD_API=ON had two
uses:
- Allow platform vendors to plug-in an __external_threading header which
should take care of the entire threading infrastructure of libcxx
- Allow testing of an externally-threaded library build; where the thread API
is declared using pthread data structures, and the implementation of this
API is provided as a separate library (test/support/external_threads.cpp)
and linked-in when running the test suite.
r290850 breaks the second use case (pthread data structures are no longer
available). This patch re-stores the ability to build+test an
externally-threaded library variant on a pthread based system.
llvm-svn: 290878
Refactor the header to allow us to implement alternate threading models
with alternate data structures. Take the opportunity to clang-format
the area. This will allow us to avoid re-declaring the interfaces for
Win32 threading. NFC
llvm-svn: 290850
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
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
These swap tests were swapping non-POCS non-equal allocators which
is undefined behavior. This patch changes the tests to use allocators
which compare equal. In order to test that the allocators were not
swapped I added an "id" field to test_allocator which does not
participate in equality but does propagate across copies/swaps.
This patch is based off of D26623 which was submitted by STL.
llvm-svn: 289358
test/support/test_macros.h
For convenience/greppability, add macros for libcxx-specific static_asserts about noexceptness.
(Moving the definitions of ASSERT_NOEXCEPT/ASSERT_NOT_NOEXCEPT isn't technically necessary
because they're macros, but I think it's better style to define stuff before using it.)
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.tuple/tuple.apply/apply.pass.cpp
There was a completely unused `TrackedCallable obj;`.
apply() isn't depicted with conditional noexcept in C++17.
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.tuple/tuple.apply/make_from_tuple.pass.cpp
Now that we have LIBCPP_ASSERT_NOEXCEPT, use it.
Fixes D27622.
llvm-svn: 289264
This patch changes where the C++ ABI headers are put during the build. Previously
they were put in the top level include directory (not the libc++ header directory).
However that just polutes the top level directory. Instead this patch creates a special
directory to put them in. The reason they can't be put under c++/v1 until after the build
is because libc++ uses the in-source headers, so we can't add the include path of the libc++
headers in the object dir.
Additionally this patch teaches the test suite how to find the ABI headers,
and adds a demangling utility to help debug tests with.
llvm-svn: 289195
Use static_cast<int> when storing size_t in int (or passing size_t to int).
Also, remove a spurious semicolon in test/support/archetypes.hpp.
test/support/count_new.hpp
Additionally, change data members (and parameters) to size_t.
llvm-svn: 288752
Summary: The `max_size()` method of containers should respect both the allocator's reported `max_size` and the range of the `difference_type`. This patch makes all containers choose the smallest of those two values.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26885
llvm-svn: 287729
This replaces every occurrence of _LIBCPP_STD_VER in the tests with
TEST_STD_VER. Additionally, for every affected
file, #include "test_macros.h" is being added explicitly if it wasn't
already there.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26294
llvm-svn: 286007
Under -fno-exceptions TEST_THROW becomes abort / __builtin_abort which returns
void. This causes a type mismatch in the conditional operator when testing the
library in C++98,03,11 modes.
Use a comma operator to workaround this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26147
llvm-svn: 285572
Summary:
Adapt implementation of Library Fundamentals TS optional into an implementation of N4606 optional.
- Update relational operators per http://wg21.link/P0307
- Update to requirements of http://wg21.link/P0032
- Extension: Implement trivial copy/move construction/assignment for `optional<T>` when `T` is trivially copyable.
Audit P/Rs for optional LWG issues:
- 2756 "C++ WP optional<T> should 'forward' T's implicit conversions" Implemented, which also resolves 2753 "Optional's constructors and assignments need constraints" (modulo my refusal to explicitly delete the move operations, which is a design error that I'm working on correcting in the 2756 P/R).
- 2736 "nullopt_t insufficiently constrained" Already conforming. I've added a test ensuring that `nullopt_t` is not copy-initializable from an empty braced-init-list, which I believe is the root intent of the issue, to avoid regression.
- 2740 "constexpr optional<T>::operator->" Already conforming.
- 2746 "Inconsistency between requirements for emplace between optional and variant" No P/R, but note that the author's '"suggested resolution" is already implemented.
- 2748 "swappable traits for optionals" Already conforming.
- 2753 "Optional's constructors and assignments need constraints" Implemented.
Most of the work for this patch was done by Casey Carter @ Microsoft. Thank you Casey!
Reviewers: mclow.lists, CaseyCarter, EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22741
llvm-svn: 283980
This patch is largely thanks to Casey Carter @ Microsoft. He did the initial
work of porting our experimental implementation and tests over to namespace
std.
llvm-svn: 283977
Summary:
To quote STL the problems with stack allocator are"
>"stack_allocator<T, N> is seriously nonconformant to N4582 17.6.3.5 [allocator.requirements].
> First, it lacks a rebinding constructor. (The nested "struct rebind" isn't sufficient.)
> Second, it lacks templated equality/inequality.
> Third, it completely ignores alignment.
> Finally, and most severely, the Standard forbids its existence. Allocators are forbidden from returning memory "inside themselves". This requirement is implied by the Standard's requirements for rebinding and equality. It's permitted to return memory from a separate buffer object on the stack, though."
This patch attempts to address all of those issues.
First, instead of storing the buffer inside the allocator I've change `stack_allocator` to accept the buffer as an argument.
Second, in order to fix rebinding I changed the parameter list from `<class T, size_t NumElements>` to `<class T, size_t NumBytes>`. This allows allocator rebinding
between types that have different sizes.
Third, I added copy and rebinding constructors and assignment operators.
And finally I fixed the allocation logic to always return properly aligned storage.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, howard.hinnant, STL_MSFT
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25154
llvm-svn: 283631
* Fix self-swap. Patch from Casey Carter.
* Remove workarounds and tests for types with deleted move constructors. This
was originally added as part of a LWG proposed resolution that has since
changed.
* Re-apply most recent PR for LWG 2769.
* Re-apply most recent PR for LWG 2754. Specifically fix the SFINAE checks to
use the decayed type.
* Fix tests to allow moved-from std::any's to have a non-empty state. This is
the behavior of MSVC's std::any.
* Various whitespace and test fixes.
llvm-svn: 283606
Summary: There's a macro scheme already being used for __has_feature etc. Use it for __has_include too, which makes MSVC happy (it doesn't support __has_include yet, and unguarded use explodes horribly).
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25251
llvm-svn: 283260
Summary:
Libc++ still uses per-feature configuration macros when configuring for C++11. However libc++ requires a feature-complete C++11 compiler so there is no reason to check individual features. This patch starts the process of removing the feature specific macros and replacing their usage with `_LIBCPP_CXX03_LANG`.
This patch removes the __config macros:
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_TRAILING_RETURN
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_TEMPLATE_ALIASES
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_ADVANCED_SFINAE
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_DEFAULT_FUNCTION_TEMPLATE_ARGS
* _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_STATIC_ASSERT
As a drive I also changed our C++03 static_assert to use _Static_assert if available.
I plan to commit this without review if nobody voices an objection.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24895
llvm-svn: 282347
This patch further decouples libc++ from pthread, allowing libc++ to be built
against other threading systems. There are two main use cases:
- Building libc++ against a thread library other than pthreads.
- Building libc++ with an "external" thread API, allowing a separate library to
provide the implementation of that API.
The two use cases are quite similar, the second one being sligtly more
de-coupled than the first. The cmake option LIBCXX_HAS_EXTERNAL_THREAD_API
enables both kinds of builds. One needs to place an <__external_threading>
header file containing an implementation of the "libc++ thread API" declared
in the <__threading_support> header.
For the second use case, the implementation of the libc++ thread API can
delegate to a custom "external" thread API where the implementation of this
external API is provided in a seperate library. This mechanism allows toolchain
vendors to distribute a build of libc++ with a custom thread-porting-layer API
(which is the "external" API above), platform vendors (recipients of the
toolchain/libc++) are then required to provide their implementation of this API
to be linked with (end-user) C++ programs.
Note that the second use case still requires establishing the basic types that
get passed between the external thread library and the libc++ library
(e.g. __libcpp_mutex_t). These cannot be opaque pointer types (libc++ sources
won't compile otherwise). It should also be noted that the second use case can
have a slight performance penalty; as all the thread constructs need to cross a
library boundary through an additional function call.
When the header <__external_threading> is omitted, libc++ is built with the
"libc++ thread API" (declared in <__threading_support>) as the "external" thread
API (basic types are pthread based). An implementation (pthread based) of this
API is provided in test/support/external_threads.cpp, which is built into a
separate DSO and linked in when running the libc++ test suite. A test run
therefore demonstrates the second use case (less the intermediate custom API).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21968
Reviewers: bcraig, compnerd, EricWF, mclow.lists
llvm-svn: 281179
This patch implements the std::sample function added to C++17 from LFTS. It
also removes the std::experimental::sample implementation which now forwards
to std::sample.
llvm-svn: 279948