This patch adds a large number of missing includes in the libc++ headers
and the test suite. Those were found as part of the effort to move
towards a mostly monolithic top-level std module.
Several headers that should not be provided when localization or threads
are disabled were not guarded. That works until one tries to build with
modules and these headers get pulled in.
Note that this could be cleaned up further into something more
systematic, but this patch solves the immediate problems I ran into with
the monolithic modulemap and doesn't create any new inconsistency that
wasn't already there.
This adds addressof at the required places in [input.output]. Some of
the new tests failed since string used operator& internally. These have
been fixed too.
Note the new fstream tests perform output to a basic_string instead of a
double. Using a double requires num_get specialization
num_get<CharT, istreambuf_iterator<CharT,
char_traits_operator_hijacker<CharT>>
This facet is not present in the locale database so the conversion would
fail due to a missing locale facet. Using basic_string avoids using the
locale.
As a drive-by fixes several bugs in the ofstream.cons tests. These
tested ifstream instead of ofstream with an open mode.
Implements:
- LWG3130 [input.output] needs many addressof
Closes#100246.
As time went by, a few files have become mis-formatted w.r.t.
clang-format. This was made worse by the fact that formatting was not
being enforced in extensionless headers. This commit simply brings all
of libcxx/include in-line with clang-format again.
We might have to do this from time to time as we update our clang-format
version, but frankly this is really low effort now that we've formatted
everything once.
In essence, this header has always been related to configuration of
the library but we didn't want to put it inside <__config> due to
complexity reasons. Now that we have sub-headers in <__config>, we
can move <__availability> to it and stop including it everywhere since
we already obtain the required macros via <__config>.
When calling setbuf(nullptr, 0) before performing file operations it
should set the file to unbuffered mode. Currently the code avoids
buffering internally, but the underlying stream still can buffer.
This is addressed by disabling the buffering of the underlying stream.
Fixes: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/60509
Originally, we used __libcpp_verbose_abort to handle assertion failures.
That function was declared from all public headers. Since we don't use
that mechanism anymore, we don't need to declare __libcpp_verbose_abort
from all public headers, and we can clean up a lot of unnecessary
includes.
This patch also moves the definition of the various assertion categories
to the <__assert> header, since we now rely on regular IWYU for these
assertion macros.
rdar://105510916
Finishes implementation of
- P2093R14 Formatted output
- P2539R4 Should the output of std::print to a terminal be synchronized
with the underlying stream?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D156609
This patch runs clang-format on all of libcxx/include and libcxx/src, in
accordance with the RFC discussed at [1]. Follow-up patches will format
the benchmarks, the test suite and remaining parts of the code. I'm
splitting this one into its own patch so the diff is a bit easier to
review.
This patch was generated with:
find libcxx/include libcxx/src -type f \
| grep -v 'module.modulemap.in' \
| grep -v 'CMakeLists.txt' \
| grep -v 'README.txt' \
| grep -v 'libcxx.imp' \
| grep -v '__config_site.in' \
| xargs clang-format -i
A Git merge driver is available in libcxx/utils/clang-format-merge-driver.sh
to help resolve merge and rebase issues across these formatting changes.
[1]: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-clang-formatting-all-of-libc-once-and-for-all
In preparation for running clang-format on the whole code base, we are
also removing mentions of the legacy _LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY macro in
favor of the newer _LIBCPP_HIDE_FROM_ABI.
We're still leaving the definition of _LIBCPP_INLINE_VISIBILITY to avoid
creating needless breakage in case some older patches are checked-in
with mentions of the old macro. After we branch for LLVM 18, we can do
another pass to clean up remaining uses of the macro that might have
gotten introduced by mistake (if any) and remove the macro itself at the
same time. This is just a minor convenience to smooth out the transition
as much as possible.
See
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-clang-formatting-all-of-libc-once-and-for-all
for the clang-format proposal.
<filesystem> is a C++17 addition. In C++11 and C++14 modes, we actually
have all the code for <filesystem> but it is hidden behind a non-inline
namespace __fs so it is not accessible. Instead of doing this unusual
dance, just guard the code for filesystem behind a classic C++17 check
like we normally do.
This makes the conditionals quite a bit simpler to understand, since it
avoids double negatives and makes sure we have <__availability>
included. For vendors which use availability macros, it also enforces
that they check when specific features are introduced and define the
macro for their platform appropriately.
This patch brings std::ios_base::noreplace from P2467R1 to libc++.
This requires compiling the shared library in C++23 mode since otherwise
fstream::open(...) doesn't know about the new flag.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137640
Co-authored-by: Louis Dionne <ldionne.2@gmail.com>
This patch fixes an ASAN-found issue in std::basic_filebuf where we'd
check the wrong size before proceeding to set our internal buffer to
the externally-provided buffer, leading to the library trying to read
from the incorrect buffer in underflow().
Thanks to Andrey Semin for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D154514
Adding additional instantiations to the dylib isn't actually an ABI break as long as programs targeting an older dylib don't start to depend on them. Making additional instantiations a matter of availability allows us to add them without an ABI break.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, Mordante
Spies: arichardson, ldionne, Mordante, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D154796
This allows including once_flag directly from <__locale> instead of
depending on all of <mutex>, which requires threading. In turn, this
makes it easier to support locales on platforms without threading.
Drive-by change: clang-format once_flag.h and use _LIBCPP_HIDE_FROM_ABI
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D155487
Replace most uses of `_LIBCPP_ASSERT` with
`_LIBCPP_ASSERT_UNCATEGORIZED`.
This is done as a prerequisite to introducing hardened mode to libc++.
The idea is to make enabling assertions an opt-in with (somewhat)
fine-grained controls over which categories of assertions are enabled.
The vast majority of assertions are currently uncategorized; the new
macro will allow turning on `_LIBCPP_ASSERT` (the underlying mechanism
for all kinds of assertions) without enabling all the uncategorized
assertions (in the future; this patch preserves the current behavior).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D153816
Since LIBCXX_ENABLE_FILESYSTEM now truly represents whether the
platform supports a filesystem (as opposed to whether the <filesystem>
library is provided), we can provide a few additional classes from
the <filesystem> library even when the platform does not have support
for a filesystem. For example, this allows performing path manipulations
using std::filesystem::path even on platforms where there is no actual
filesystem.
rdar://107061236
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D152382
This makes it clearer that the availability macro only pertains to
<filesystem>, and not to whether the platform has support for a file
system.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D152172
LIBCXX_ENABLE_FILESYSTEM should represent whether the platform has
support for a filesystem, not just whether we support <filesystem>.
This patch slightly generalizes the setting to also encompass whether
we provide <fstream>, since that only makes sense when a filesystem is
supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D152168
To make sure all member functions that require it are marked `_LIBCPP_EXCLUDE_FROM_EXPLICIT_INSTANTIATION` I compared the output of `objdump --syms lib/libc++.1.0.dylib` before and after, ignoring addresses.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Spies: Mordante, libcxx-commits, ldionne, arichardson, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150896
The module validation script of D144994 validate whether the contents of
an include match its module. An include is the set of files matching the
pattern:
- foo
- foo/*.
- __fwd/foo.h
Several declarations of the stream headers are in the header iosfwd.
This gives issue using the validation script. Adding iosfwd to the set
of matching files gives too many declarations. For example when
validating the fstream header it will pull in declarations of the
istream header. Instead if writing a set of filters the headers are
granularized into smaller headers containing the expected declarations.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148927
We already have a clang-tidy check for making sure that `_LIBCPP_HIDE_FROM_ABI` is on free functions. This patch extends this to class members. The places where we don't check for `_LIBCPP_HIDE_FROM_ABI` are classes for which we have an instantiation in the library.
Reviewed By: ldionne, Mordante, #libc
Spies: jplehr, mikhail.ramalho, sstefan1, libcxx-commits, krytarowski, miyuki, smeenai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142332
We changed the `abort` calls when trying to throw exceptions in `-fno-exceptions` mode to `__verbose_abort` calls, which removes the dependency in most files.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: dim, emaste, mikhail.ramalho, smeenai, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146076
Other macros that disable parts of the library are named `_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_WHATEVER`.
Reviewed By: ldionne, Mordante, #libc
Spies: libcxx-commits, smeenai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143163
This allows porting the library to platforms that are able to support
<iostream> but that do not have a notion of a filesystem, and where it
hence doesn't make sense to support std::fstream (and never will).
Also, remove reliance on <fstream> in various tests that didn't
actually need it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D138327
The flexibility around extern template instantiation declarations in
libc++ result in a very complicated model, especially when support for
slightly different configurations (like the debug mode or assertions
in the dylib) are taken into account. That results in unexpected bugs
like http://llvm.org/PR50534 (and there have been multiple similar
bugs in the past, notably around the debug mode).
This patch gets rid of the _LIBCPP_DISABLE_EXTERN_TEMPLATE knob, which
I don't think is fundamental. Indeed, the motivation for that knob was to
avoid taking a dependency on the library, however that can be done better
by linking against the static library instead. And in fact, some parts of
the headers will always depend on things defined in the library, which
defeats the original goal of _LIBCPP_DISABLE_EXTERN_TEMPLATE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103960
This patch changes the requirement for getting the declaration of the
assertion handler from including <__assert> to including any public
C++ header of the library. Note that C compatibility headers are
excluded because we don't implement all the C headers ourselves --
some of them are taken straight from the C library, like assert.h.
It also adds a generated test to check it. Furthermore, this new
generated test is designed in a way that will make it possible to
replace almost all the existing test-generation scripts with this
system in upcoming patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122506
This is the first step towards disentangling the debug mode and assertions
in libc++. This patch doesn't make any functional change: it simply moves
_LIBCPP_ASSERT-related stuff to its own file so as to make it clear that
libc++ assertions and the debug mode are different things. Future patches
will make it possible to enable assertions without enabling the debug
mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119769