Summary:
I haven't added it to all the tests, just those that fail without it
(those that aren't header only).
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21247
llvm-svn: 272443
Patch by Laman Sole <laxman.g@partner.samsung.com>, Sebastian Pop
<s.pop@samsung.com>, Aditya Kumar <aditya.k7@samsung.com>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21103
llvm-svn: 272401
Some pthread implementations do not like being called pthead_join()
with the pthread_t argument set to 0, and causes a segfault. This
patch fixes this issue by validating the pthread_t argument before
invoking pthread_join().
NFC.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20929
Change-Id: Ief817c57bd0e1f43cbaa03061e02417d6a180c38
Reviewers: EricWF
llvm-svn: 271634
LWG issue 2218 relaxes a restriction on how containers can call
Alloc::construct(...) and Alloc::destroy(...). There is nothing new to test.
llvm-svn: 271477
Summary:
Currently much of the libcxx website is duplicated between the old www/ documentation and newer Sphinx docs. This patch changes the main libc++ webpage so that it links to the new documentation where possible. This means removing numerous sections from the landing page.
@mclow.lists What do you think?
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits, mclow.lists
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19250
llvm-svn: 271469
Summary:
Exactly what it sounds like.
I plan to commit this in a couple of days assuming no objections.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20799
llvm-svn: 271464
Summary:
This patch changes the libc++ CMake so that it adds certain target flags like '-m32' or '--gcc-toolchain' before including config-ix.cmake.
Since these flags can affect things like check_library_exists([...]) they needed to be added before the tests are performed.
This patch fixes:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24322
Reviewers: danalbert, jroelofs, bcraig, compnerd
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20887
llvm-svn: 271460
This patch addresses the following issues in the test suite:
1. Move "std::bad_array_length" test from std/ to libcxx/ test directory
since the feature is not a part of the standard.
2. Rename "futures.tas" test directory to "futures.task" since that is the
correct stable name.
3. Move tests for "packaged_task<T>::result_type" from std/ to libcxx/
test directory since the typedef is a libc++ extension.
llvm-svn: 271430
Quite a few libcxx tests seem to follow the format:
#if _LIBCPP_STD_VER > X
// Do test.
#else
// Empty test.
#endif
We should instead use the UNSUPPORTED lit directive to exclude the test on
earlier C++ standards. This gives us a more accurate number of test passes
for those standards and avoids unnecessary conflicts with other lit
directives on the same tests.
Reviewers: bcraig, ericwf, mclow.lists
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20730
llvm-svn: 271108
Summary:
GLIBC recently removed the incorrect `int isinf(double)` and `int isnan(double)` overloads in C++11 and greater. This causes previously `XFAIL: linux` tests to start passing.
Since there is no longer a way to 'XFAIL' the tests I choose to simply tolerate this bug.
See https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19439
Reviewers: rsmith, mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: jroelofs, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19835
llvm-svn: 271060
The existing pthread detection code in __config is pretty good for
common operating systems. It doesn't allow cmake-time choices to be
made for uncommon operating systems though.
This change adds the LIBCXX_HAS_PTHREAD_API cmake flag, which turns
into the _LIBCPP_HAS_THREAD_API_PTHREAD preprocessor define. This is
a name change from the old _LIBCPP_THREAD_API_PTHREAD. The lit tests
want __config_site.in variables to have a _LIBCPP_HAS prefix.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D20573
llvm-svn: 270735
The various _l locale extension functions originate from very
different places. Some come from POSIX, some are BSD extensions,
and some are shared BSD and GLIBC extensions. This patch tries to
group the local extension reimplementations by source. This should
make it easier to make libcxx work with POSIX compliant C libraries
that lack these extensions.
The fallback locale functions are also useful on their own for other
lightweight platforms. Putting these fallback implementations in
support/xlocale should enable code sharing.
I have no access to a newlib system or an android system to build
and test with. I _do_ have access to a system without any of the _l
locale extensions though, and I was able to ensure that the new
__posix_l_fallback.h and __strtonum_fallback.h didn't have any massive
problems.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17416
llvm-svn: 270213
This patch implements the C++11 version of declval without requiring a template
instantiation.
See PR27798 for more information. https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27798
llvm-svn: 269991
When you assign a shared_ptr, the deleter gets called and assigned. In this routine, the assignment happens inside a critical section, which could (potentially) lead to a deadlock, if the deleter did something wonky. Now we swap the old value with an (empty) temporary shared_ptr, and then let the temporary delete the old value when it goes out of scope (after the lock has been released). This should fix PR#27724. Thanks to Hans Boehm for the bug report and the suggested fix.
llvm-svn: 269965
This option is geared towards shared library builds and causes static
library builds to fail if not explicitly disabled.
This patch fixes PR27706: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27706
Thanks rgoodfel@isi.edu for the catch.
llvm-svn: 269585
Summary:
Currently libc++experimental builds with C++11. This patch changes that to C++14 when supported by the compiler. Although nothing currently requires C++14 the upcoming <experimental/memory_resource> implementation would benefit from it. [1]
Note that libc++.so continues to build with C++11 and is unaffected by this change.
[1] <experimental/memory_resource> provides global resources which must exist for the entire lifetime of the program. In order to ensure that a global resource can be used during program termination there destructors must never be invoked. The only way to do this, while also allowing "constant initialization", is to use a C++14 union.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: pete, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19992
llvm-svn: 269070
This patch extracts out all the pthread dependencies of libcxx into the
new header __threading_support. The motivation is to make it easy to
re-target libcxx into platforms that do not support pthread.
Original patch from Fulvio Esposito (fulvio.esposito@outlook.com) - D11781
Applied with tweaks - D19412
Change-Id: I301111f0075de93dd8129416e06babc195aa936b
llvm-svn: 268734
Summary:
Out-of-line symbols for <experimental/...> headers are not ABI or API stable and cannot live in the 'libc++.dylib'. Currently they have nowhere to live. I would like to add a new library target `libc++experimental.a` to fix this.
Previously I had suggested different libraries for different TS's (`libc++filesystem.a`, 'libc++LFTS.a`, ect). I no longer think this is the right approach.
Instead `c++experimental` will hold *all* TS implementations as a single monolithic library. I see two main benefits to this:
1. Users only have to know about and manually link one library.
2. It makes it easy to implement TS's with one or two out-of-line symbols. (Ex. PMRs)
`c++experimental` provides NO ABI compatibility. Symbols can freely be added/removed/changed without concern for ABI stability.
I will add documentation for this after landing this patch (but before adding anything to it).
`c++experimental` only builds as a static library. By default CMake will build/test this library but will *NOT* install it.
This patch adds the CMake and LIT logic needed to build/test the new library. Once this lands I plan on using it to implement parts of `<experimental/memory_resource>`.
Reviewers: mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits, theraven, krememek, dexonsmith, bcraig, beanz, danalbert
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19856
llvm-svn: 268443
This patch fixes a bunch of bugs in the fallback implementation of
is_convertible, which is used by GCC. Removing the "__is_convertible"
specializations for array/function types we fallback on the SFINAE test,
which is more correct.
See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27538
llvm-svn: 268359
Summary:
Replace non-Standard "atomic_flag f(false);" with Standard "atomic_flag f;" in clear tests.
Although the value of 'f' is unspecified it shouldn't matter because these tests always call `f.test_and_set()` without checking the result, so the initial state shouldn't matter.
The test init03.pass.cpp is explicitly testing this non-Standard extension; It has been moved into the `test/libcxx` directory.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, STL_MSFT
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19758
llvm-svn: 268355
std::__clz is a libc++ specific function so it can't be used in the test suite.
This patch implements a dumb "count leading zeros" implementation within
hexfloat itself.
This patch also fixes UB since the output of `__builtin_clz(0)` is undefined
according to the GCC docs.
llvm-svn: 268354
This change doesn't impact the behavior of the install-libcxx target which installs whichever libcxx components you build, it just adds a separate target to just install the headers.
llvm-svn: 268124
This patch does the following:
* Remove <__config> includes from some container tests.
* Guards uses of std::launch::any in async tests because it's an extension.
* Move "test/std/extensions" to "test/libcxx/extensions"
* Moves various non-standard tests including those in "sequences/vector",
"std/localization" and "utilities/meta".
llvm-svn: 267981
Testing the concrete implementation of INVOKE means calling the implementation
specific names `__invoke` and `__invoke_constexpr`. For this reason the test
are non-standard. For this reason it's best if the tests live outside of the
`test/std` directory.
llvm-svn: 267973
Summary:
when setting LIBCXX_ENABLE_EXCEPTIONS=false, _LIBCPP_NO_EXCEPTIONS wil be defined in both commandline and _config
Reviewers: bcraig, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19344
llvm-svn: 266956
Summary:
Hi,
When creating a new thread libc++ performs at least 2 allocations. The first allocates a tuple of args and the functor that will be passed to the new thread. The second allocation is for the thread local storage needed internally by libc++. Currently the second allocation happens in the child thread, meaning that if it throws the program will terminate with an uncaught bad alloc.
The solution to this is to allocate ALL memory in the parent thread and then pass it to the child.
See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15638
Reviewers: mclow.lists, danalbert, jroelofs, EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13748
llvm-svn: 266851
The primary purpose of this patch is to add the 'is_callable' traits.
Since 'is_nothrow_callable' required making 'INVOKE' conditionally noexcept
I also took this oppertunity to implement a constexpr version of INVOKE.
This fixes 'std::experimental::apply' which required constexpr 'INVOKE support'.
This patch will be followed up with some cleanup. Primarly removing most
of "__member_function_traits" since it's no longer used by INVOKE (in C++11 at least).
llvm-svn: 266836
These changes make linking against static libraries more explicit. Instead
of using -lc++ and -lc++abi in the tests, an absolute path to the library is
provided instead.
The choices of shared vs. static, and the choices of library paths for both
libcxx and libcxxabi needed to be exchanged for this to work. In other words,
libcxx tests need to know the library path of libcxxabi, and whether libcxxabi
is a static or shared library.
Some Mac specific logic for testing against libc++abi had to be moved from
libcxxabi's config.py, as it was overriding choices made in libcxx's config.py.
That logic is now in libcxx's target_info.py.
Testing a static libcxx on Linux will now automatically link in librt most of
the time. Previously, lots of pthread tests would fail because of an
unresolved clock_gettime.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D16544
llvm-svn: 266730
In cases where emplace is called with two arguments and the first one
matches the key_type we can Key to check for duplicates before allocating.
This patch expands on work done by dexonsmith@apple.com.
llvm-svn: 266498
There are two main fixes in this patch.
First the constructor SFINAE was changed so that it's evaluated in two stages
where the first stage evaluates the "safe" SFINAE conditions and the second
evaluates the "dangerous" ones. The key is that the second stage is lazily
evaluated only if the first stage passes. This helps fix PR23256
(https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23256).
The second fix is for PR22806 and LWG issue 2549. This fix applies
the suggested resolution to the LWG issue in order to prevent the construction
of dangling references. The SFINAE for this check is contained within
the _PreferTupleLikeConstructor alias template. The tuple-like constructors
are disabled whenever that trait returns false.
(https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22806)
(http://cplusplus.github.io/LWG/lwg-active.html#2549)
llvm-svn: 266461
Summary:
A default uses-allocator constructor has been added since that overload was previously provided by the extended constructor.
Since Clang does implicit conversion checking after substitution this constructor has to deduce the allocator_arg_t parameter so that it can prevent the evaluation of "is_default_constructible" if the first argument doesn't match. See http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#1391 for more information.
This patch fixes PR24779 (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24779)
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19006
llvm-svn: 266409
map's allocator may only be used to construct objects of 'value_type',
or in this case 'pair<const Key, Value>'. In order to respect this requirement
in operator[], which requires default constructing the 'mapped_type', we have
to use pair's piecewise constructor with '(tuple<Kep>, tuple<>)'.
Unfortunately we still need to provide a fallback implementation for C++03
since we don't have <tuple>. Even worse this fallback is the last remaining
user of '__hash_map_node_destructor' and '__construct_node_with_key'.
This patch also switches try_emplace over to __tree.__emplace_unique_key_args.
llvm-svn: 264989
This patch is fairly large and contains a number of changes. The changes all work towards
allowing __tree to properly handle __value_type esspecially when inserting into the __tree.
I chose not to break this change into smaller patches because it wouldn't be possible to
write meaningful standard-compliant tests for each patch.
It is very similar to r260513 "[libcxx] Teach __hash_table how to handle unordered_map's __hash_value_type".
Changes in <map>
* Remove __value_type's constructors because it should never be constructed directly.
* Make map::emplace and multimap::emplace forward to __tree and remove the old definitions
* Remove "__construct_node" map and multimap member functions. Almost all of the construction is done within __tree.
* Fix map's move constructor to access "__value_type.__nc" directly and pass this object to __tree::insert.
Changes in <__tree>
* Add traits to detect, handle, and unwrap, map's "__value_type".
* Convert methods taking "value_type" to take "__container_value_type" instead. Previously these methods caused
unwanted implicit conversions from "std::pair<Key, Value>" to "__value_type<Key, Value>".
* Delete __tree_node and __tree_node_base's constructors and assignment operators. The node types should never be constructed
because the "__value_" member of __tree_node must be constructed directly by the allocator.
* Make the __tree_node_destructor class and "__construct_node" methods unwrap "__node_value_type" into "__container_value_type" before invoking the allocator. The user's allocator can only be used to construct and destroy the container's value_type. Passing it map's "__value_type" was incorrect.
* Cleanup the "__insert" and "__emplace" methods. Have __insert forward to an __emplace function wherever possible to reduce
code duplication. __insert_unique(value_type const&) and __insert_unique(value_type&&) forward to __emplace_unique_key_args.
These functions will not allocate a new node if the value is already in the tree.
* Change the __find* functions to take the "key_type" directly instead of passing in "value_type" and unwrapping the key later.
This change allows the find functions to be used without having to construct a "value_type" first. This allows for a number
of optimizations.
* Teach __move_assign and __assign_multi methods to unwrap map's __value_type.
llvm-svn: 264986
Summary:
This was voted into C++17 at the Jacksonville meeting. The final P0152R1
paper will be in the upcoming post-Jacksonville mailing, and is also
available here:
http://jfbastien.github.io/papers/P0152R1.html
Reviewers: mclow.lists, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17951
llvm-svn: 264413
unordered_set::emplace and unordered_map::emplace construct a node, then
try to insert it. If insertion fails, the node gets deleted.
To avoid this unnecessary malloc traffic, check to see if the argument
to emplace has the appropriate key_type. If so, we can use that key
directly and delay the malloc until we're sure we're inserting something
new.
Test updates by Eric Fiselier, who rewrote the old allocation tests to
include the new cases.
There are two orthogonal future directions:
1. Apply the same optimization to set and map.
2. Extend the optimization to when the argument is not key_type, but can
be converted to it without side effects. Ideally, we could do this
whenever key_type is trivially destructible and the argument is
trivially convertible to key_type, but in practise the relevant type
traits "blow up sometimes". At least, we should catch a few simple
cases (such as when both are primitive types).
llvm-svn: 263746
This adds clang thread safety annotations to std::mutex and
std::lock_guard so code using these types can use these types directly
instead of having to wrap the types to provide annotations. These checks
when enabled by -Wthread-safety provide simple but useful static
checking to detect potential race conditions.
See http://clang.llvm.org/docs/ThreadSafetyAnalysis.html for details.
This patch was reviewed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D14731.
llvm-svn: 263611
Commit f49839299a085505eb673544744b61d2d9cdd1db in glibc-2.14 changed the
locales to the currently required format. However, they were again changed in
commit 55bdd2866f23b28422d969060b3518909a12b100 which has been released in 2.17.
That leads to the current situation where Debian and e.g. CentOS 6 have the
pre-2.14 locales, for example Ubuntu 14.04 has pre-2.17 and CentOS 7 on the
other hand has the newest locales in glibc-2.17.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18187
llvm-svn: 263554
std::addressof may be used on a storage of an object before the start
of its lifetime (see std::allocate_shared for example). CFI flags the
C-style cast as invalid in that case.
llvm-svn: 263310
For the locale refactor, the locale management functions (newlocale,
freelocale, uselocale) are needed in a separate header from the various _l
functions. This is because some platforms implement the _l functions in terms
of a locale switcher RAII helper, and the locale switcher RAII helper needs
the locale management functions. This patch helps pave the way by getting all
the functions in the right files, so that later diffs aren't completely
horrible.
Unfortunately, the Windows, Cygwin, and MinGW builds seemed to have
bit-rotted, so I wasn't able to test this completely. I don't think I made
things any worse than they already are though.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17419
llvm-svn: 263020
Instead of checking _LIBCPP_LOCALE_L_EXTENSIONS all over, instead check it
once, and define the various *_l symbols once. The private redirector symbol
names are all prefixed with _libcpp_* so that they won't conflict with user
symbols, and so they won't conflict with future C library symbols. In
particular, glibc likes providing private symbols such as __locale_t, so we
should follow a different naming pattern (like _libcpp_*) to avoid problems
on that front.
Tested on Linux with glibc. Hoping for the best on OSX and the various BSDs.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17456
llvm-svn: 263016