This is a preparation to split the format header in smaller parts for the
upcoming patches.
Depends on D101723
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102703
This also provides some of the scaffolding needed by D102992 and D101729, and mops up after D101730 etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103055
Use the same visiblity attributes as for all other template
specializations in the same file; declare the specialization itself
using _LIBCPP_TYPE_VIS, and don't use _LIBCPP_EXPORTED_FROM_ABI on
the destructor. Methods that are excluded from the ABI are marked
with _LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY.
This makes the vtable exported from DLL builds of libc++. Practically,
it doesn't make any difference for the CI configuration, but it
can make a difference in mingw setups.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102717
Not only do we conscientiously avoid using `__wrap_iter` for non-contiguous
iterators (in vector, string, span...) but also we make the assumption
(in regex) that `__wrap_iter<_Iter>` is contiguous for all `_Iter`.
So `__wrap_iter<reverse_iterator<int*>>` should be considered IFNDR,
and every `__wrap_iter` should correctly advertise contiguity in C++20.
Drive-by simplify some type traits.
Reviewed as part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D102781
This commit alphabetizes all includes in libcxx. This is a NFC.
This can also serve as a pseudo "announcement" for how we should order these headers going forward (note: double underscores go before other headers).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102941
This is the second to last one! Based on D101396. Depends on D100255. Refs D101079 and D101193.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101476
* adds `sized_range` and conformance tests
* moves `disable_sized_range` into namespace `std::ranges`
* removes explicit type parameter
Implements part of P0896 'The One Ranges Proposal'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102434
Add this attribute to some types to ensure that they have
debug info.
The debug info for these classes are required for debuggers to display
some STL types. With constructor homing (a new debug info optimization)
their debug info isn't emitted because their constructors are never
called.
The list of types with the attribute added are __hash_value_type,
__value_type, __tree_node_base, __tree_node, __hash_node, __list_node,
and __forward_list_node.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98750
Fix __bitop_unsigned_integer and rename to __libcpp_is_unsigned_integer.
There are only five unsigned integer types, so we should just list them out.
Also provide `__libcpp_is_signed_integer`, even though the Standard doesn't
consume that trait anywhere yet.
Notice that `concept uniform_random_bit_generator` is specifically specified
to rely on `concept unsigned_integral` and *not* `__is_unsigned_integer`.
Instantiating `std::ranges::sample` with a type `U` satisfying
`uniform_random_bit_generator` where `unsigned_integral<U::result_type>`
and not `__is_unsigned_integer<U::result_type>` is simply IFNDR.
Orthogonally, fix an undefined behavior in std::countr_zero(__uint128_t).
Orthogonally, improve tests for the <bit> manipulation functions.
It was these new tests that detected the bug in countr_zero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102328
Before this commit, we'd get a compilation error because the operator() overload was ambiguous.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102263
D85051's honeypot solution was a bit too aggressive swallowed up the
comparison types, which made comparing objects of different ordering
types ambiguous.
Depends on D101707.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101708
Both `<type_traits>` and `<charconv>` implemented this function with
different names and a slightly different behavior. This removes the
version in `<charconv>` and improves the version in `<typetraits>`.
- The code can be used again in C++11.
- The original claimed C++14 support, but `[[nodiscard]]` is not
available in C++14.
- Adds `_LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY`.
Reviewed By: zoecarver, #libc, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102332
C++17 deprecates `std::raw_storage_iterator` and C++20 removes it.
Implements part of:
* P0174R2 'Deprecating Vestigial Library Parts in C++17'
* P0619R4 'Reviewing Deprecated Facilities of C++17 for C++20'
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101730
The standard leaves it up to the implementation to decide whether or not
these operators are hidden friends. There are several (well-documented)
reasons to prefer hidden friends, as well as an argument for improved
readability.
Depends on D100342.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101707
* `operator!=` isn't in the spec
* `<compare>` is designed to work with `operator<=>` so it doesn't
really make sense to have `operator<=>`-less friendly sections.
Depends on D100283.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100342
`weak_equality` and `strong_equality` were removed before being
standardised, and need to be removed.
Also adjusts `common_comparison_category` since its test needed
adjusting due to the equality deletions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100283
This is a rough reapplication of the change that fixed std::to_address
to avoid relying on element_type (da456167). It is somewhat different
because the fix to avoid breaking Clang (which caused it to be reverted
in 347f69c55) was a bit more involved.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101638
This appears to be a bug in our string::assign: when assigning into
a longer string, from a shorter snippet of itself, we invalidate
iterators before doing the copy. We should invalidate them afterward.
Also drive-by improve the formatting of a function header.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101675
This allocator is not intended for libc++'s users to use;
it's strictly an implementation detail of `src/locale.cpp`.
So, move it to the `src/include/` directory.
Drive-by const-qualify its comparison operators.
For consistency with `__hidden_allocator` (defined in `src/thread.cpp`),
do *not* remove it from "libcxx/lib/libc++unexp.exp",
"libcxx/utils/symcheck-blacklists/linux_blacklist.txt", etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101293
This reverts commit da456167, which broke the Clang build. I'm able to
reproduce it but I want to give myself a bit more time to investigate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101638
In std::tuple, we should try to avoid calling std::is_copy_constructible
whenever we can to avoid surprising interactions with (I believe) compiler
builtins. This bug was reported in https://reviews.llvm.org/D96523#2730953.
The issue was that when tuple<_Up...> was the same as tuple<_Tp...>, we
would short-circuit the _Or (because sizeof...(_Tp) != 1) and go evaluate
the following `is_constructible<_Tp, const _Up&>...`. That shouldn't
actually be a problem, but see the analysis in https://reviews.llvm.org/D101770#2736470
for why it is with Clang and GCC.
Instead, after this patch, we check whether the constructed-from tuple
is the same as the current tuple regardless of the number of elements,
since we should always prefer the normal copy constructor in that case
anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101770
This fixes the issue by implementing _And using the short-circuiting
SFINAE trick that we previously used only in std::tuple. One thing we
could look into is use the naive recursive implementation for disjunctions
with a small number of arguments, and use that trick with larger numbers
of arguments. It might be the case that the constant overhead for setting
up the SFINAE trick makes it only worth doing for larger packs, but that's
left for further work.
This problem was raised in https://reviews.llvm.org/D96523.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101661
This patch gets rid of technical debt around std::pointer_safety which,
I claim, is entirely unnecessary. I don't think anybody has used
std::pointer_safety in actual code because we do not implement the
underlying garbage collection support. In fact, P2186 even proposes
removing these facilities entirely from a future C++ version. As such,
I think it's entirely fine to get rid of complex workarounds whose goals
were to avoid breaking the ABI back in 2017.
I'm putting this up both to get reviews and to discuss this proposal for
a breaking change. I think we should be comfortable with making these
tiny breaks if we are confident they won't hurt anyone, which I'm fairly
confident is the case here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100410
This reverts a224bf8ec4 and fixes the
underlying issue.
The underlying issue is simply that MSVC headers contains a define
like "#define __in", where __in is one macro in the MSVC Source
Code Annotation Language, defined in sal.h
Just use a different variable name than "__in"
__indirectly_readable_impl, and add "__in" to nasty_macros.h just
like the existing __out. (Also adding a couple more potentially
conflicting ones.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101613
A span has no idea what container (if any) "owns" its iterators, nor
under what circumstances they might become invalidated.
However, continue to use `__wrap_iter<T*>` instead of raw `T*` outside
of debug mode, because we've been shipping `std::span` since Clang 7
and ldionne doesn't want to break ABI. (Namely, the mangling of functions
taking `span::iterator` as a parameter.) Permit using raw `T*` there,
but only under an ABI macro: `_LIBCPP_ABI_SPAN_POINTER_ITERATORS`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101003
* `std::ranges::range`
* `std::ranges::sentinel_t`
* `std::ranges::range_difference_t`
* `std::ranges::range_value_t`
* `std::ranges::range_reference_t`
* `std::ranges::range_rvalue_reference_t`
* `std::ranges::common_range`
`range_size_t` depends on `sized_range` and will be added alongside it.
Implements parts of:
* P0896R4 The One Ranges Proposal`
Depends on D100255.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100269
While working on D70631, Microsoft's unit tests discovered an issue.
Our `std::to_chars` implementation for bases != 10 uses the range
`[first,last)` as temporary buffer. This violates the contract for
to_chars:
[charconv.to.chars]/1 http://eel.is/c++draft/charconv#to.chars-1
`to_chars_result to_chars(char* first, char* last, see below value, int base = 10);`
"If the member ec of the return value is such that the value is equal to
the value of a value-initialized errc, the conversion was successful and
the member ptr is the one-past-the-end pointer of the characters
written."
Our implementation modifies the range `[member ptr, last)`, which causes
Microsoft's test to fail. Their test verifies the buffer
`[member ptr, last)` is unchanged. (The test is only done when the
conversion is successful.)
While looking at the code I noticed the performance for bases != 10 also
is suboptimal. This is tracked in D97705.
This patch fixes the issue and adds a benchmark. This benchmark will be
used as baseline for D97705.
Reviewed By: #libc, Quuxplusone, zoecarver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100722
When using the per-target runtime build, it may be desirable to have
different __config_site headers for each target where all targets cannot
share a single configuration.
The layout used for libc++ headers after this change is:
```
include/
c++/
v1/
<libc++ headers except for __config_site>
<target1>/
c++/
v1/
__config_site
<target2>/
c++/
v1/
__config_site
<other targets>
```
This is the most optimal layout since it avoids duplication, the only
headers that's per-target is __config_site, all other headers are
shared across targets. This also means that we no need two
-isystem flags: one for the target-agnostic headers and one for
the target specific headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89013
This reverts a large chunk of http://reviews.llvm.org/D15862 ,
and also fixes bugs in `insert`, `append`, and `assign`, which are now regression-tested.
(Thanks to Tim Song for pointing out the bug in `append`!)
Before this patch, we did a special dance in `append`, `assign`, and `insert`
(but not `replace`). All of these require the strong exception guarantee,
even when the user-provided InputIterator might have throwing operations.
The naive way to accomplish this is to construct a temporary string and
then append/assign/insert from the temporary; i.e., finish all the potentially
throwing and self-inspecting InputIterator operations *before* starting to
modify self. But this is slow, so we'd like to skip it when possible.
The old code (D15682) attempted to check that specific iterator operations
were nothrow: it assumed that if the iterator operations didn't throw, then
it was safe to iterate the input range multiple times and therefore it was
safe to use the fast-path non-naive version. This was wrong for two reasons:
(1) the old code checked the wrong operations (e.g. checked noexceptness of `==`,
but the code that ran used `!=`), and (2) the conversion of value_type to char
could still throw, or inspect the contents of self.
The new code is much simpler, although still much more complicated than it
really could be. We'll likely revisit this codepath at some point, but for now
this patch suffices to get it passing all the new regression tests.
The added tests all fail before this patch, and succeed afterward.
See https://quuxplusone.github.io/blog/2021/04/17/pathological-string-appends/
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98573
This allows us to turn -Wdeprecated-copy back on. We turned it off
in 3b71de41cc because Clang's implementation became more stringent
and started diagnosing the old code here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101183
During the review of D97115 it was mentioned adding the `<utility>`
header for `__to_underlying` was a bit unfortunate. Nowadays we tend to
implement smaller headers, so a good reason to move `std::to_underlying`
to its own header and adjust `<charconv>` to use the new header.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101233
Implements parts of:
* P0896R4 The One Ranges Proposal`
Depends on D100073.
Reviewed By: ldionne, zoecarver, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100080
This nasty patch rewrites the tuple constructors to match those defined
by the Standard. We were previously providing several extensions in those
constructors - those extensions are removed by this patch.
The issue with those extensions is that we've had numerous bugs filed
against us over the years for problems essentially caused by them. As a
result, people are unable to use tuple in ways that are blessed by the
Standard, all that for the perceived benefit of providing them extensions
that they never asked for.
Since this is an API break, I communicated it in the release notes.
I do not foresee major issues with this break because I don't think the
extensions are too widely relied upon, but we can ship it and see if we
get complaints before the next LLVM release - that will give us some
amount of information regarding how much use these extensions have.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96523
That was originally committed in 04733181b5 and then reverted in
a9f11cc0d9 because it broke several people.
The problem was a missing include of __iterator/concepts.h, which has now
been fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100073
Implements parts of:
* P0896R4 The One Ranges Proposal`
Depends on D99873.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100073
Implements parts of:
* P0896R4 The One Ranges Proposal
Depends on D99855.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99863
Based on D100682 and D99855.
(Note: I originally was going to just make this part of D99855, but I decided not to because this patch moves lots of unrelated code around, and I didn't want to make D99855 harder to review because of unrelated code-changes/moves.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100686
* adds `iterator_traits` specialisation that supports all expected
member aliases except for `pointer`
* adds `iterator_traits` specialisations for iterators that meet the
legacy iterator requirements but might lack multiple member aliases
* makes pointer `iterator_traits` specialisation require objects
Depends on D99854.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99855
Previously the decision of which library to try to autolink was
based on _DLL, however the _DLL define (which is set by the compiler)
is tied to whether using a dynamically linked CRT or not, and the choice
of dynamic or static CRT is entirely orthogonal to whether libc++ is
linked dynamically or statically.
If _LIBCPP_DISABLE_VISIBILITY_ANNOTATIONS isn't defined, then all
declarations are decorated with dllimport, and there's no doubt that
the DLL version of the library is what must be linked.
_LIBCPP_DISABLE_VISIBILITY_ANNOTATIONS is defined if building with
LIBCXX_ENABLE_SHARED disabled, and thus the static library is what
should be linked.
If defining _LIBCPP_DISABLE_VISIBILITY_ANNOTATIONS manually but wanting
to link against the DLL version of the library, that's not a canonical
configuration, and then it's probably reasonable to manually define
_LIBCPP_NO_AUTO_LINK too, and manually link against the desired
library.
This fixes, among other issues, running tests for the library if
built with LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC disabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100539
This is the initial patch to implement ranges in libc++.
Implements parts of:
- P0896R4 One Ranges Proposal
- P1870 forwarding-range is too subtle
- LWG3379 in several library names is misleading
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, cjdb, zoecarver, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90999
This patch fixes LWG2874. It is based on the original patch by Zoe Carver
originally uploaded at D81417.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81417
The `iterator_traits` patch became too large for a concise review, so
the "bloat" —as it were— was moved into this patch. Also tests most
C++[98,17] iterator types to confirm backwards compatibility is
successful (regex iterators are intentionally not present, but directory
iterators are due to a peculiar error encountered while patching
`iterator_traits`).
Depends on D99461.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99854
Implements parts of:
* P0896R4 The One Ranges Proposal
* LWG3446 `indirectly_readable_traits` ambiguity for types with both `value_type` and `element_type`
Depends on D99141.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99461
This makes it clear that headers like <memory> which include auto_ptr
only do that when compiling under an older Standard, or when the removed
feature is explicitly requested.
Some of Microsoft's unit tests in D70631 fail because libc++'s
implementation of std::chars_format isn't a proper bitmask type. Adding
the required functions to make std::chars_format a proper bitmask type.
Implements parts of P0067: Elementary string conversions
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97115
Summary:
When building with gcc on AIX, it seems that gcc does not like the
`always_inline` without the `inline` keyword.
So adding the inline keywords in for __open in ifstream and ofstream.
That will also make it consistent with __open in basic_filebuf
(it seems we added `inline` there before for gcc build as well).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99422
The checks did not work in __config, since no header defining
`_NEWLIB_VERSION` was included before. This patch moves the two
checks for newlib to the headers that actually need it - and after
they already include relevant headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79888
These [[nodiscard]] annotations are added as a conforming extension;
it's unclear whether the paper will actually be adopted and make them
mandatory, but they do seem like good ideas regardless.
https://isocpp.org/files/papers/D2351R0.pdf
This patch implements the paper's effect on:
- std::to_integer, std::to_underlying
- std::forward, std::move, std::move_if_noexcept
- std::as_const
- std::identity
The paper also affects (but libc++ does not yet have an implementation of):
- std::bit_cast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99895
Summary:
AIX system's stdlib.h provide different overload of abs and div
depending on compiler versions.
For example, std::div(long, long) and std::abs(long) are not available
from OS's stdlib.h when building with clang, but they are available
when building with xlclang compiler.
Therefore, we need to provide those extra overloads in libc++'s stdlib.h
when OS's stdlib.h does not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99767
LWG3175 identifies that the `common_reference` requirement for
`swappable_with` is over-constraining and doesn't need to concern itself
with cv- or reference qualifiers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99817
As mandated by the Standard's various synopses, e.g. [iterator.synopsis].
Searching the TeX source for '#include' is a good way to find all of these
mandates.
The new tests are all autogenerated by utils/generate_header_inclusion_tests.py.
I was SHOCKED by how many mandates there are, and how many of them
libc++ wasn't conforming with.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99309
Use `_LIBCPP_TEMPLATE_VIS` instead of `_LIBCPP_TYPE_VIS` for a template
class.
This fixes the nodiscard_extensions.pass.cpp and a couple
func.search.default test cases when built in MSVC/DLL configurations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99932
* `std::predicate`
* `std::relation`
* `std::equivalence_relation`
* `std::strict_weak_order`
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96477
This patch fixes rc and errno within nanosleep(). It also updates __rem parameter as well it introduces cast to handle conversions from long into unsigned int to avoid warnings.
Reviewed By: Mordante
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99373
Including `<concepts>` in other standard library headers (such as
`<iterator>`) creates circular dependencies due to `<functional>`.
Since `<concepts>` only needs `std::invoke` from `<functional>`, the
easiest, fastest, and cleanest way to eliminate the circular dep is to
move `std::invoke` into `__functional_base`.
This has the added advantage of `<concepts>` not transitively importing
`<functional>`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99041
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Reviewed By: Mordante
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98983
These variables were introduced during early work on the runtimes build
but were obsoleted by {LIBCXX,LIBCXXABI,LIBUNWIND}_INSTALL_LIBRARY_DIR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99697
This will avoid typos like `_LIBCPP_STD_VERS` (<future>) or using `#if TEST_STD_VER > 17` without including "test_macros.h".
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99515
The standard guarantees sleep durations of 2^63-1 nanoseconds to work.
Instead of depending on INT64_MAX or ULONGLONG_MAX to exist via the
header pollution, fold the constant directly. That has the additional
positive side effect that it avoids long double arithmetic bugs in GCC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99516
Prior to this patch, we would generate a fancy <__config> header by
concatenating <__config_site> and <__config>. This complexifies the
build system and also increases the difference between what's tested
and what's actually installed.
This patch removes that complexity and instead simply installs <__config_site>
alongside the libc++ headers. <__config_site> is then included by <__config>,
which is much simpler. Doing this also opens the door to having different
<__config_site> headers depending on the target, which was impossible before.
It does change the workflow for testing header-only changes to libc++.
Previously, we would run `lit` against the headers in libcxx/include.
After this patch, we run it against a fake installation root of the
headers (containing a proper <__config_site> header). This makes use
closer to testing what we actually install, which is good, however it
does mean that we have to update that root before testing header changes.
Thus, we now need to run `ninja check-cxx-deps` before running `lit` by
hand.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97572
Specifically, use these metafunctions consistently in areas that are
about to be affected by P1518R2's changes.
This is the NFCI part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D97742 .
The functional-change part is still waiting for P1518R2 to be
officially merged into the working draft.
This patch changes the variant even in pre-C++2b.
It should not break anything, only allow use cases that didn't work previously.
Notes:
`__as_variant` is used in `__visitation::__variant::__visit_alt`, but I haven't used it in `__visitation::__variant::__visit_alt_at`.
That's because it is used only in `__visit_value_at`, which in turn is always used on variant specializations (that's in comparison operators).
* https://wg21.link/P2162
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97394
This refactor is not only a good idea, but is in fact required by the standard,
in the sense that <array> is mandated to include <compare>.
So <compare> shouldn't have a circular dependency on <array>!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99307
This path would unblock the build of libc++ library on AIX:
1. Add _AIX guard for _LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_API_PTHREAD
2. Use uselocale to actually take the locale setting
into account.
3. extract_mtime and extract_atime mod needed for AIX. As stat
structure on AIX uses internal structure st_timespec to store
time for binary compatibility reason. So we need to convert it
back to timespec here.
4. Do not build cxa_thread_atexit.cpp for libcxxabi on AIX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97558
Including xlocinfo.h is a bit of a layering violation; locale.h is
the C library header we should use, while xlocinfo.h is essentially
part of the MS C++ library. Including xlocinfo.h brings in yvals.h,
which brings in yvals_core.h, which defines the MS STL's version
support macros, overriding what libc++'s <version> had defined.
Instead just include locale.h, and provide the few defines we need
for locale categories manually.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99213
Left to finish P0482:
* <cuchar> header.
* Parts of <memory_resource> concerning char8_t. Also, tests for hash<pmr::*string>.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99184
Mostly, *don't* include <experimental/__config> from C++17 <any>,
because that doesn't make any sense. I think it was just a cut-and-paste
typo when this header moved from experimental/.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99089
The container headers don't need to include <functional> for any other reason
(or at least, they wouldn't if we moved `less` and `equal_to` out of <functional>),
so let's put `__libcpp_erase_if_container` somewhere that's common to the
containers but outside of <functional>.
Also, calling `std::erase_if(c, pred)` should not trigger ADL.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99043
This came out of my review comments on D97283.
This patch re-enables the use of `__is_fundamental`, `__is_signed`, etc.
on non-Clang compilers. Previously, when we found that a builtin didn't
work on old Clangs, we had been reacting by limiting its use to new Clangs
(i.e., we'd also stop using it on new GCCs and new MSVCs, just because of
the old Clang bug). I claim that this was unintentional.
Notice that on Apple Clang, `_LIBCPP_COMPILER_CLANG` is defined and
`_LIBCPP_CLANG_VER` is not defined (therefore `0` in arithmetic expressions).
We assume that Apple Clang has all the bugs of all the Clangs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98720
The aim is to use the correct vasprintf implementation for z/OS libc++, where a copy of va_list ap is needed. In particular, it avoids the potential that the initial internal call to vsnprintf will modify ap and the subsequent call to vsnprintf will use that modified ap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97473
This is my attempt to merge D98077 (bugfix the format strings for
Windows paths, which use wchar_t not char)
and D96986 (replace C++ variadic templates with C-style varargs so that
`__attribute__((format(printf)))` can be applied, for better safety)
and D98065 (remove an unused function overload).
The one intentional functional change here is in `__create_what`.
It now prints path1 and path2 in square-brackets _and_ double-quotes,
rather than just square-brackets. Prior to this patch, it would
print either path double-quoted if-and-only-if it was the empty
string. Now the double-quotes are always present. I doubt anybody's
code is relying on the current format, right?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98097
In previous versions of clang, __is_signed and __is_unsigned builtins did not
correspond to is_signed and is_unsigned behaviour for enums. The builtins were
fixed in D67897 and D98104.
* Disable the fast path of is_unsigned for clang versions < 13
* Add more tests for is_signed, is_unsigned and is_arithmetic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97283
The aim is to add the missing z/OS specific implementations for mbsnrtowcs and wcsnrtombs, as part of libc++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98207
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D97911
Reviewed By: EricWF, #libc, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98154
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D97443
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone, EricWF, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97911
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D97359
Reviewed By: EricWF, #libc, Quuxplusone, zoecarver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97443
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D97162
Reviewed By: EricWF, #libc, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97359
Check that appends with a path object doesn't do allocations, even
on windows.
Suggested by Marek in D98398. The patch might apply without D98398
(depending on how much of the diff context has to match), but doesn't
make much sense until after that patch has landed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98412
The aim is to add the missing z/OS specific locale functions for libc++ (newlocale, freelocale and uselocale).
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98044
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D96742
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97162
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D96660
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97176
The aim is to add missing non-posix functions for z/OS libc++ (strtod_l and strtof_l).
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97051
This fixes clang warnings (that are treated as errors when running
the test suite):
libcxx/include/string:4409:59: error: definition of dllimport static field [-Werror,-Wdllimport-static-field-def]
basic_string<_CharT, _Traits, _Allocator>::npos;
The warning is normally not visible as long as the libc++ headers
are treated as system headers.
The same construct is always an error in MSVC.
(One _LIBCPP_FUNC_VIS was added in
2d8f23f571, which broke DLL builds.
59919c4d6b fixed this by adding another
_LIBCPP_FUNC_VIS on the declaration for consistency, but the underlying
issue remained, that one can't use dllimport here.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97168
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D96660
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96742
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D96660
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96683
This is just a shorter synonym for `__identity<T>::type`.
Use it consistently throughout, where possible.
There is still some metaprogramming in <memory> and <variant>
where `__identity` is being used _without_ immediately calling
`::type` on it; but this is the unusual case, and it will become
even less usual as we start deliberately protecting certain types
against deduction (e.g. D97742).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97862
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D96657
Reviewed By: ldionne, Mordante, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96660
Implements part of P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
Reworks D74351 to use requires-clauses over SFINAE and so that it more
closely follows the wording.
Co-authored by: Michael Schellenberger Costa <mschellenbergercosta@googlemail.com>
(Michael did all the heavy lifting and I came in to polish it for
submission, since Michael is focussing on `std::format` now.)
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96657
libc++ was previously a bit confused by what the value of __cpp_concepts
should be. Also replaces `__floating_point` with `floating_point` now
that it exists.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97015
The implementation of tuple's constructors and assignment operators
currently diverges from the way the Standard specifies them, which leads
to subtle cases where the behavior is not as specified. In particular, a
class derived from a tuple-like type (e.g. pair) can't be assigned to a
tuple with corresponding members, when it should. This commit re-implements
the assignment operators (BUT NOT THE CONSTRUCTORS) in a way much closer
to the specification to get rid of this bug. Most of the tests have been
stolen from Eric's patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D27606.
As a fly-by improvement, tests for noexcept correctness have been added
to all overloads of operator=. We should tackle the same issue for the
tuple constructors in a future patch - I'm just trying to make progress
on fixing this long-standing bug.
PR17550
rdar://15837420
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50106
The spec doesn't declare it as an enum class, and being declared
as an enum class breaks referring to the values as e.g.
path::auto_format.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97084
This matches what MS STL returns; in std::filesystem, forward slashes
are considered generic dir separators that are valid on all platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91181
This patch implements 2802. Requires _Deleter to have call operator and be move constructible. Based on D62233.
Refs PR37637.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62274
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96577
The root_path function has to be changed to return the parsed bit
as-is; otherwise a path like "//net" gets a root path of "//net/", as
the root name, "//net", gets the root directory (an empty string) appended,
forming "//net/". (The same doesn't happen for the root dir "c:" though.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91178
The namespace is unnecessary, and libc++ style is not to include it on type names.
(As opposed to function names, where qualification affects ADL; and in certain
function signatures where `std::` and `_VSTD::` might be mangled differently.
This is none of those situations.)
We need CLOCK_MONOTONIC equivalent implementation for z/OS within libc++. The default implementation is asserting.
On z/OS the lack of 'clock_gettime()' and 'time_point()' force us to look for alternatives.
The current proposal is to use `gettimeofday()` for CLOCK_MONOTONIC which is also used in CLOCK_REALTIME. This will allow us to skip the assertion with compromised CLOCK_MONOTONIC implementation which will not guarantee to never go back in time because it will use `gettimeofday()` but only when it's set.
Is this a good compromise for platforms which does not support monotonic clock?
Hopefully this will spark the discussion and agreement how to proceed in this situation.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, hubert.reinterpretcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93542
It seems like modifying the header doesn't cause libc++ to be rebuild.
So the breakage of the previous commit didn't happen on my system.
This should fix the build of https://buildkite.com/mlir/mlir-core
Implements parts of:
- P0645 Text Formatting
Depends on D92214
Reland with changes:
The format header will only be compiled if the compiler used has support
for concepts. This should fix the issues with the initial version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93166
Not using builtins doesn't always imply worse code,
but for e. g. isinf, this is 30%+ faster.
Before:
name time/op
BM_isinf 2.14ns ± 2%
After:
name time/op
BM_isinf 1.33ns ± 2%
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88854
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96235
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74292
Implements parts of:
* P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
* P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88131
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D96230
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96232
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D77961
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96230
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77961
Implement the resolution of LWG2993. Replace a deleted constructor
with a constructor that SFINAEs away in appropriate circumstances.
Also, now that the constructor is templated, we must have an
explicit deduction guide to make CTAD work.
Some tests have been merged in from Agustín Bergé's D40259.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92725
Adds `noexcept` to `string_view`/`string::find` and similar members
(`rfind`, etc.). See discussion in D95251. Refs D95821.
Reviewed By: curdeius, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95848
- Quality-of-implementation: Avoid calling __unwrap_iter in constexpr contexts.
The user might conceivably write a contiguous iterator where normal iterator
arithmetic is constexpr-friendly but `std::to_address(it)` isn't.
- Bugfix: When you pass contiguous iterators to `std::copy`, you should get
back your contiguous iterator type, not a raw pointer. That means that
libc++ can't `__unwrap_iter` unless it also does `__rewrap_iter`.
Fortunately, this is implementable.
- Improve test coverage of the new `contiguous_iterator` test iterator.
This catches the bug described above.
- Tests: Stop testing that we can `std::copy` //into// an `input_iterator`.
Our test iterators may currently support that, but it seems nonsensical to me.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95983
This reverts commit b6ffece320.
The bug is now fixed (it was a stupid cut-and-paste kind of error),
and the regression test added. The new patch is also simpler than the old one!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96084
Before this patch, feature-test macros didn't take special availability
markup into account, which means that feature-test macros can sometimes
appear to "lie". For example, if you compile in C++20 mode and target
macOS 10.13, the __cpp_lib_filesystem feature-test macro will be provided
even though the <filesystem> declarations are marked as unavailable.
This patch fixes that.
rdar://68142369
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94983
We do ship those headers, so the directory name should not be something
that can potentially conflict with user-defined directories.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95956
- Implement C++20's changes to `reverse_iterator`, so that it won't be
accidentally counted as a contiguous iterator in C++20 mode.
- Implement C++20's changes to `move_iterator` as well.
- `move_iterator` should not be contiguous. This fixes a bug where
we optimized `std::copy`-of-move-iterators in an observable way.
Add a regression test for that bugfix.
- Add libcxx tests for `__is_cpp17_contiguous_iterator` of all relevant
standard iterator types. Particularly check that vector::iterator
is still considered contiguous in all C++ modes, even C++03.
After this patch, there continues to be no supported way to write your
own iterator type in C++17-and-earlier such that libc++ will consider it
"contiguous"; however, we now fully support the C++20 approach (in C++20
mode only). If you want user-defined contiguous iterators in C++17-and-earlier,
libc++'s position is "please upgrade to C++20."
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94807
This reverts commit 35a57f39b5.
A build is broken during clang bootstrap with:
In file included from ../libcxx/src/format.cpp:9:
/tmp/ci-nGNyLRM9V3/include/c++/v1/format:153:16: error: no member named 'is_constant_evaluated' in namespace 'std::__1'
if (_VSTD::is_constant_evaluated() && __id >= __num_args_)
~~~~~~~^
1 error generated.
Implements:
- LWG3149 DefaultConstructible should require default initialization
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on D91986
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93461
Add deleted volatile copy-assignment operator in the most derived atomic
to fix the Bug 41784. The root cause: there is an `operator=(T) volatile`
that has better match than the deleted copy-assignment operator of the base
class when `this` is `volatile`. The compiler sees that right operand of
the assignment operator can be converted to `T` and chooses that path
without taking into account the deleted copy-assignment operator of the
base class.
The current behavior on libstdc++ is different from what we have in libc++.
On the same test compilation fails with libstdc++. Proof: https://godbolt.org/z/nebPYd
(everything is the same except the -stdlib option).
I choose the way with explicit definition of copy-assignment for atomic
in the most derived class. But probably we can fix that by moving
`operator=(T)` overloads to the base class from both specializations.
At first glance, it shouldn't break anything.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90968
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Depends on: D91004
Reviewed By: ldionne, cjdb, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91986
This is the first step at implementing <format>. It adds the <format> header
and implements the `format_error`. class.
Implemnts parts of:
-P0645 Text Formatting
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, miscco, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92214
This patch is more than just adding the `constexpr` keyword, because
the old code relied on `goto`, and `goto` is not constexpr-friendly.
Refactor to eliminate `goto`, and then mark it as constexpr in C++20.
I freely admit that the name `__nth_element_partloop` is bad;
I couldn't find any better name because I don't really know
what this loop is doing, conceptually. Vice versa, I think
`__nth_element_find_guard` has a decent name.
Now the only one we're still missing from P0879 is `sort`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93557
https://reviews.llvm.org/rG5369517d20dd362a178a1b2d6c398d8898ee4620
bumped the version number in __config to 13000, causing a test failure
in libcxx/test/libcxx/libcpp_version.pass.cpp because now the two
don't match.
This is the only part of the post-release TODO in
libcxx/docs/Contributing.rst that wasn't done by that commit.
LWG reflector consensus is that this was a bug in libc++.
(In particular, MSVC also will fix it in their STL, soon.)
Bug originally discovered by Logan Smith.
Also fix `std::function<const void()>`, which should work
the same way as `std::function<void()>` in terms of allowing
"conversions" from non-void types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94452
After this patch, the only parts of P0879 that remain missing will be
std::nth_element, std::sort, and the heap/partial_sort algorithms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93443
Implements parts of:
- P0898R3 Standard Library Concepts
- P1754 Rename concepts to standard_case for C++20, while we still can
Reviewed By: ldionne, miscco, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91004
It has the low-level bit fiddling operations from bit. It eliminates a cyclic dependency between __bit_reference, bits, and vector. I want to exploit this in later patches.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94908
local __libcpp_asprintf_l() -> libc asprintf() was inspecting the pointer (with
indeterminate value) for failure, rather than the return value of -1.
Reviewed By: ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94564
Previously, LIBCXX_ENABLE_FILESYSTEM controlled only whether the filesystem
support was compiled into libc++'s library. This commit promotes the
setting to a first-class option like LIBCXX_ENABLE_LOCALIZATION, where
the whole library is aware of the setting and features that depend on
<filesystem> won't be provided at all. The test suite is also properly
annotated such that tests that depend on <filesystem> are disabled when
the library doesn't support it.
This is an alternative to https://llvm.org/D94824, but also an improvement
along the lines of LIBCXX_ENABLE_LOCALIZATION that I had been wanting to
make for a while.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94921
When the Debug mode is enabled, we disable extern declarations because we
don't want to use the functions compiled in the library, which might not
have had the debug mode enabled when built. However, some extern declarations
need to be kept, because code correctness depends on it.
31e820378b removed those declarations, which had the unintended
consequence of breaking the debug build. This commit fixes that by
re-introducing a separate macro for the required extern declarations,
and adds a comment so that we don't fall into that trap in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94718
The implementation had a lot of boilerplate and was more complicated than
necessary. This NFC refactoring introduces a few macros to reduce code
duplication, and uses a consistent style and formatting for the whole file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94544
Clang insists that __attribute__ attributes precede __declspec
attributes. This is a longstanding known issue:
https://llvm.org/pr24559. Re-order the visibility and deprecation macros
to fix the build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94788
Contrary to the current visibility macro documentation, it appears that
gcc does handle visibility attribute on extern templates correctly, e.g.
https://godbolt.org/g/EejuV7. We need this so that extern template
instantiations of classes not marked _LIBCPP_TEMPLATE_VIS (e.g.
__vector_base_common) are correctly exported with gcc when building with
hidden visibility.
Reviewed By: ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35388
Sometimes `_Compare` is an lvalue reference type, so letting it be
deduced is pretty much always wrong. (Well, less efficient than
it could be, anyway.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93562
I accidentally disabled this feature-test macro in my D93830,
due to a rebasing conflict. It had been enabled by my D93815,
and should have remained enabled.
This patch updates `allocate_shared` to call `allocator_traits::construct`
when creating the object held inside the shared_pointer, and
`allocator_traits::destroy` when destroying it. This resolves
the part of P0674R1 that was originally filed as LWG2070.
This change is landed separately from the rest of P0674R1 because it is
incredibly tricky from an ABI perspective.
This is the reason why this change is so tricky is that we previously
used EBO in a compressed pair to store both the allocator and the object
type stored in the `shared_ptr`. However, starting in C++20, P0674
requires us to use Allocator construction for initializing the object type.
That requirement rules out the use of the EBO for the object type, since
using the EBO implies that the base will be initialized when the control
block is initialized (and hence we can't do it through Allocator construction).
Hence, supporting P0674 requires changing how we store the object type
inside the control block, which we do while being ABI compatible by using
some trickery with a properly aligned char buffer.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR41900
Supersedes https://llvm.org/D62760
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91201
It's still a little confusing because in many cases C++17 and C++20
have different values, and libc++ implements the C++17 behavior but
not the C++20 behavior; 'unimplemented' can't represent that scenario.
Ultimately we probably ought to completely redesign the script to be
in terms of paper numbers, rather than language revisions, and make
it generate the CSV files like "Cxx2aStatusPaperStatus.csv" as well.
Most newly added macros are unimplemented. I've marked a few as implemented,
though, based on my reading of the code; for example I was pretty sure
`__cpp_lib_latch` is implemented since we have `<latch>`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93830
* The only exception is that the flag -std=c++2a is still used not to break compatibility with older compilers (clang <= 9, gcc <= 9).
* Bump _LIBCPP_STD_VER for C++20 to 20 and use 21 for the future standard (C++2b).
That's a preparation step to add c++2b support to libc++.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93383
This affects only vectors with weird/malicious allocators,
the same corner case covered in D91708, but for `vector<bool>` this time.
Also ADL-proof <__tree>, which affects only sets and maps with weird/malicious
allocators where the ADL trap is in the *fancy pointer type*.
Also drive-by _VSTD:: qualification in the guts of std::bind,
std::packaged_task, std::condition_variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93424
On windows, the narrow, char based paths normally don't use utf8, but
can use many different native code pages, and this is what system
functions that operate on files, taking such paths/file names, interpret
them as.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91137
Also set the preferred separator to backslash.
libc++ doesn't compile successfully for windows prior to this change,
and this change on its own isn't enough to make it compile successfully
either, but is the first stepping stone towards making it work correctly.
Most of operations.cpp will need to be touched, both for calling
functions that take wchar paths, but also for using other windows
specific functions instead of the posix functions used so far; that is
handled in later commits.
Changing parts of operations.cpp to generalize the string type handling
in code that doesn't touch system functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91135
When the allocator is only explicitly convertible from other specializations
of itself, the new version of std::allocate_shared would not work because
it would try to do an implicit conversion. This patch fixes the problem
and adds a test so that we don't fall into the same trap in the future.
Checking that `T` is constructible from `Args...` is technically not
required by the Standard, although any implementation will obviously
error out if that's not satisfied. However, this check is incompatible
with using Allocator construction in the control block (upcoming change
as part of implementing P0674), so I'm removing it now to reduce the
upcoming diff as much as possible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93246
This commit is a step towards making it easier to add support for arrays
in allocate_shared. Adding support for arrays will require writing multiple
functions, and the current complexity of writing allocate_shared is
prohibitive for understanding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93130
In addition to making the code a lot easier to grasp by localizing many
helper functions to the only file where they are actually needed, this
will allow creating helper functions that depend on allocator_traits
outside of <memory>.
This is done as part of implementing array support in allocate_shared,
which requires non-trivial array initialization algorithms that would be
better to keep out of <memory> for sanity. It's also a first step towards
splitting up our monolithic headers into finer grained ones, which will
make it easier to reuse functionality across the library. For example,
it's just weird that we had to define `addressof` inside <type_traits>
to avoid circular dependencies -- instead it's better to implement those
in true helper headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93074
- std::reference_wrapper
- std::function
- std::mem_fn
While I'm here, remove _VSTD:: qualification from calls to `declval`
because it takes no arguments and thus isn't susceptible to ADL.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92884
Everywhere, normalize the whitespace to `::new (EXPR) T`.
Everywhere, normalize the spelling of the cast to `(void*)EXPR`.
Without the cast to `(void*)`, the expression triggers ADL on GCC.
(I think this is a GCC bug: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=98249)
Even if it doesn't trigger ADL, it still seems incorrect to use any argument
that's not exactly `(void*)` because that opens the possibility of overload
resolution picking a user-defined overload of `operator new`, which would be
wrong.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93153
This simplifies the implementation, and it appears to be equivalent since
make_shared was allocating memory with std::allocator anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93071
Generally these calls aren't vulnerable to ADL because they involve only
primitive types. The ones in <list> and <vector> drag in namespace std
but that's OK; the ones in <fstream> and <strstream> are vulnerable
iff `CharT` is an enum type, which seems far-fetched.
But absolutely zero of them *need* ADL to happen; so in my opinion
they should all be consistently qualified, just like calls to any
other (non-user-customizable) functions in namespace std.
Also: Include <cstring> and <cwchar> in <__string>.
We seemed to be getting lucky that <memory> included <iterator>
included <iosfwd> included <wchar.h>. That gave us the
global-namespace `wmemmove`, but not `_VSTD::wmemmove`.
This is now fixed.
I didn't touch these headers:
<ext/__hash> uses strlen, safely
<support/ibm/locale_mgmt_aix.h> uses memcpy, safely
<string.h> uses memchr and strchr, safely
<wchar.h> uses wcschr, safely
<__bsd_locale_fallbacks.h> uses wcsnrtombs, safely
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93061
This matches how libc++ does it in all other C++ headers
(that is, headers not ending in ".h").
We need to include <cstring> if we want to use `_VSTD::memmove`
instead of unqualified ADL `memmove`. Even though ADL doesn't
physically matter in <charconv>'s specific case, I'm trying
to migrate libc++ to using `_VSTD::memmove` for all cases
(because some of them do matter, and this way it's easier to
grep for outliers).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92875
This is the first of a series of patches leading up to the implementation
of P0674r1, i.e. array support in allocate_shared. I am splitting this
up into multiple patches because the overall change is very tricky and
I want to isolate potential breakage.
This attribute permits a typedef to be associated with a class template
specialization as a preferred way of naming that class template
specialization. This permits us to specify that (for example) the
preferred way to express 'std::basic_string<char>' is as 'std::string'.
The attribute is applied to the various class templates in libc++ that have
corresponding well-known typedef names.
This is a re-commit. The previous commit was reverted because it exposed
a pre-existing bug that has since been fixed / worked around; see
PR48434.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91311
The interesting change here is that we no longer consider `__convert_to_integral`
an ADL customization point for the user's types. I think the new behavior
is defensible. The old behavior had come from D7449, where Marshall explicitly
said "people can't define their own [`__convert_to_integral` overloads]."
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92814
This change exposed a pre-existing issue with deserialization cycles
caused by a combination of attributes and template instantiations
violating the deserialization ordering restrictions; see PR48434 for
details.
A previous commit attempted to work around PR48434, but appears to have
only been a partial fix, and fixing this properly seems non-trivial.
Backing out for now to unblock things.
This reverts commit 98f76adf4e and
commit a64c26a47a.
This attribute permits a typedef to be associated with a class template
specialization as a preferred way of naming that class template
specialization. This permits us to specify that (for example) the
preferred way to express 'std::basic_string<char>' is as 'std::string'.
The attribute is applied to the various class templates in libc++ that have
corresponding well-known typedef names.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91311
The issue didn't change the behaviour which is tested in libcxx/test/std/input.output/filesystems/class.path/path.member/path.concat.pass.cpp.
The change to use string_view instead of string is not strictly necessary.
<filesystem> was added in commit 998a5c8831 (Implement <filesystem>).
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92731
This is the the minimal change introduced in [[ https://reviews.llvm.org/D88599 | D88599 ]] to unblock the controversial change and discussion of proper separation between thread from thread id which will continue in D88599.
This patch will address the differences of definition of pthread_t on z/OS vs. Linux and other OS. Main trick to make the code work on z/OS relies on redefining libcpp_thread_id type and _LIBCPP_NULL_THREAD macro. This is necessary to separate initialization of libcxx_thread_id from the one of __libcxx_thread_t;
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91875
The synopsis now reflects what's implemented. It does NOT reflect
all of what's specified in C++20. The "constexpr in C++20" markings
are still missing from these 12 algorithms, because they are still
unimplemented by libc++:
reverse partition sort nth_element next_permutation prev_permutation
push_heap pop_heap make_heap sort_heap partial_sort partial_sort_copy
All of the above algorithms were excluded from [P0202].
All of the above algorithms were made constexpr in [P0879] (along with
swap_ranges, iter_swap, and rotate — we've already implemented those three).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92255
These had been waiting on the ability to use `std::copy` from
constexpr code (which in turn had been waiting on the ability to
use `is_constant_evaluated()` to switch between `memmove` and non-`memmove`
implementations of `std::copy`). That work landed a while ago,
so these algorithms can all be constexpr in C++20 now.
Simultaneously, update the tests for the set algorithms.
- Use an element type with "equivalent but not identical" values.
- The custom-comparator tests now pass something different from `operator<`.
- Make the constexpr coverage match the non-constexpr coverage.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92255
previously, invocations of std::sort(T**, T**) casted the arguments to
(size_t *). this breaks sorting on systems for which pointers don't fit
in a size_t. change the cast to (uintptr_t *) and add a test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92190
This implements the std::filesystem parts of P0482 (which is already
marked as in progress), and applies the actions that are suggested
in P1423.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90222
Some C++20 headers weren't added properly to all three of these
test files. Add them, and take the time to normalize the formatting
so that
diff <(grep '#include' foo.cpp) <(grep '#include' bar.cpp)
shows no diffs (except that `no_assert_include` deliberately
excludes `<cassert>`).
- Add macro guards to <{barrier,latch,semaphore}>.
- Add macro guards to <experimental/simd>.
- Remove an include of <cassert> from <semaphore>.
- Instead, include <cassert> in the semaphore tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92525
The static_assert in "libcxx/include/memory" was the main offender here,
but then I figured I might as well `git grep -i instantat` and fix all
the instances I found. One was in user-facing HTML documentation;
the rest were in comments or tests.
I used a lot of `git grep` to find places where `std::` was being used
outside of comments and assert-messages. There were three outcomes:
- Qualified function calls, e.g. `std::move` becomes `_VSTD::move`.
This is the most common case.
- Typenames that don't need qualification, e.g. `std::allocator` becomes `allocator`.
Leaving these as `_VSTD::allocator` would also be fine, but I decided
that removing the qualification is more consistent with existing practice.
- Names that specifically need un-versioned `std::` qualification,
or that I wasn't sure about. For example, I didn't touch any code in
<atomic>, <math.h>, <new>, or any ext/ or experimental/ headers;
and I didn't touch any instances of `std::type_info`.
In some deduction guides, we were accidentally using `class Alloc = typename std::allocator<T>`,
despite `std::allocator<T>`'s type-ness not being template-dependent.
Because `std::allocator` is a qualified name, this did parse as we intended;
but what we meant was simply `class Alloc = allocator<T>`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92250
Since we know exactly which identifiers we expect to find in `chrono`,
a using-directive seems like massive overkill. Remove the directives
and qualify the names as needed.
One subtle trick here: In two places I replaced `*__p` with `*__p.get()`.
The former is an unqualified call to `operator*` on a class type, which
triggers ADL and breaks the new test. The latter is a call to the
built-in `operator*` on pointers, which specifically
does NOT trigger ADL thanks to [over.match.oper]/1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92243
x86-64 ILP32 mode (x32) uses 32-bit size_t, so share the code with ix86 to zero out padding bits, not with x86-64 LP64 mode.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91349
I think people were sometimes parenthesizing `(foo::max)()` out of
misplaced concern that an unparenthesized `foo::max()` would trip up
Windows' `max(a,b)` macro. However, this is not the case: `max(a,b)`
should be tripped up only by an unparenthesized call to `foo::max(a,b)`,
and in fact we already do `_VSTD::max(a,b)` all over the place anyway
without any guards.
However, in order to do it without guards, we must also
wrap the header in _LIBCPP_PUSH_MACROS, which <span> was not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92240
This patch updates algorithms in <numeric> to use std::move
based on p0616r0. Moving values instead of copying them
creates huge speed improvements (see the paper for details).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61170
There were a couple of places where we needed to call the underlying
platform's aligned allocation/deallocation function. Instead of having
the same logic all over the place, extract the logic into a pair of
helper functions __libcpp_aligned_alloc and __libcpp_aligned_free.
The code in libcxxabi/src/fallback_malloc.cpp looks like it could be
simplified after this change -- I purposefully did not simplify it
further to keep this change as straightforward as possible, since it
is touching very important parts of the library.
Also, the changes in libcxx/src/new.cpp and libcxxabi/src/stdlib_new_delete.cpp
are basically the same -- I just kept both source files in sync.
The underlying reason for this refactoring is to make it easier to support
platforms that provide aligned allocation through C11's aligned_alloc
function instead of posix_memalign. After this change, we'll only have
to add support for that in a single place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91379