62 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Christopher Di Bella
ab46648082 [libcxx] adds an include-what-you-use (IWYU) mapping file
This makes it possible for programmers to run IWYU and get more accurate
standard library inclusions. Prior to this commit, the following program
would be transformed thusly:

```cpp
// Before
 #include <algorithm>
 #include <vector>

void f() {
  auto v = std::vector{0, 1};
  std::find(std::ranges::begin(v), std::ranges::end(v), 0);
}
```

```cpp
// After
 #include <__algorithm/find.h>
 #include <__ranges/access.h>
 #include <vector>
...
```

There are two ways to fix this issue: to use [comment pragmas](https://github.com/include-what-you-use/include-what-you-use/blob/master/docs/IWYUPragmas.md)
on every private include, or to write a canonical [mapping file](https://github.com/include-what-you-use/include-what-you-use/blob/master/docs/IWYUMappings.md)
that provides the tool with a manual on how libc++ is laid out. Due to
the complexity of libc++, this commit opts for the latter, to maximise
correctness and minimise developer burden.

To mimimise developer updates to the file, it makes use of wildcards
that match everything within listed subdirectories. A script has also
been added to ensure that the mapping is always fresh in CI, and makes
the process a single step.

Finally, documentation has been added to inform users that IWYU is
supported, and what they need to do in order to leverage the mapping
file.

Closes #56937.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D138189
2022-11-22 01:09:49 +00:00
Nikolas Klauser
660b243120 [libc++] Add [[nodiscard]] extensions to ranges algorithms
This mirrors what we have done in the classic algorithms

Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc

Spies: libcxx-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137186
2022-11-05 16:38:46 +01:00
Nikolas Klauser
3c355e2881 [libc++] Enable [[nodiscard]] extensions by default
Adding `[[nodiscard]]` to functions is a conforming extension and done extensively in the MSVC STL.

Reviewed By: ldionne, EricWF, #libc

Spies: #libc_vendors, cjdb, mgrang, jloser, libcxx-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128267
2022-09-02 21:34:20 +02:00
Nikolas Klauser
b978dfbf74 [libc++] Consolidate the different [[nodiscard]] configuration options into a single one
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc

Spies: libcxx-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129054
2022-08-25 22:01:34 +02:00
Louis Dionne
497705ff27 [libc++] Reorganize the documentation of extensions for integral types 2022-08-10 17:35:08 -04:00
Louis Dionne
e36f9e13bc [libc++] Allow enabling assertions when back-deploying
When back-deploying to older platforms, we can still provide assertions,
but we might not be able to provide a great implementation for the verbose
handler. Instead, we can just call ::abort().

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131199
2022-08-08 08:43:34 -04:00
Mark de Wever
f712775daf [libc++][format] Exposes basic-format-string
This paper was accepted during the last plenary and is intended to be
backported to LLVM 15. When backporting the release notes in the branch
should be updated too.

Note the feature-test macro isn't updated since this will change; three
papers have updated the same macro in the same plenary.

Implements:
- P2508R1 Exposing std::basic-format-string

Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130643
2022-08-02 20:33:17 +02:00
Louis Dionne
507125af3d [libc++] Rename __libcpp_assertion_handler to __libcpp_verbose_abort
With the goal of reusing that handler to do other things besides
handling assertions (such as terminating when an exception is thrown
under -fno-exceptions), the name `__libcpp_assertion_handler` doesn't
really make sense anymore.

Furthermore, I didn't want to use the name `__libcpp_abort_handler`,
since that would give the impression that the handler is called
whenever `std::abort()` is called, which is not the case at all.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130562
2022-07-29 13:52:42 -04:00
Mark de Wever
77ccf63ef0 [libc++][doc] Extended integral type support
This addresses a request during the review of D128929.

Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129310
2022-07-27 18:22:08 +02:00
Louis Dionne
7de5aca84c [libc++] Generalize the customizeable assertion handler
Instead of taking a fixed set of arguments, use variadics so that
we can pass arbitrary arguments to the handler. This is the first
step towards using the handler to handle other non-assertion-related
failures, like std::unreachable and an exception being thrown in
-fno-exceptions mode, which would improve user experience by including
additional information in crashes (right now, we call abort() without
additional information).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130507
2022-07-26 07:42:38 -04:00
Louis Dionne
deb3b5552f [libc++] Take advantage of -fexperimental-library in libc++
When -fexperimental-library is passed, libc++ will now pick up the
appropriate __has_feature flag defined by Clang to enable the
experimental library features.

As a fly-by, also update the documentation for the various TSes.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130176
2022-07-22 08:33:39 -04:00
Louis Dionne
07e984bc52 [libc++] Support int8_t and uint8_t in integer distributions as an extension
In D125283, we ensured that integer distributions would not compile when
used with arbitrary unsupported types. This effectively enforced what
the Standard mentions here: http://eel.is/c++draft/rand#req.genl-1.5.

However, this also had the effect of breaking some users that were
using integer distributions with unsupported types like int8_t. Since we
already support using __int128_t in those distributions, it is reasonable
to also support smaller types like int8_t and its unsigned variant. This
commit implements that, adds tests and documents the extension. Note that
we voluntarily don't add support for instantiating these distributions
with bool and char, since those are not integer types. However, it is
trivial to replace uses of these random distributions on char using int8_t.

It is also interesting to note that in the process of adding tests
for smaller types, I discovered that our distributions sometimes don't
provide as faithful a distribution when instantiated with smaller types,
so I had to relax a couple of tests. In particular, we do a really bad
job at implementing the negative binomial, geometric and poisson distributions
for small types. I think this all boils down to the algorithm we use in
std::poisson_distribution, however I am running out of time to investigate
that and changing the algorithm would be an ABI break (which might be
reasonable).

As part of this patch, I also added a mitigation for a very likely
integer overflow bug we were hitting in our tests in negative_binomial_distribution.
I also filed http://llvm.org/PR56656 to track fixing the problematic
distributions with int8_t and uint8_t.

Supersedes D125283.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126823
2022-07-22 08:33:01 -04:00
Louis Dionne
7300a651f5 [libc++] Re-apply "Always build c++experimental.a""
This re-applies bb939931a1ad, which had been reverted by 09cebfb978de
because it broke Chromium. The issues seen by Chromium should be
addressed by 1d0f79558ca4.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128927
2022-07-19 10:44:19 -04:00
Hans Wennborg
09cebfb978 Revert "[libc++] Always build c++experimental.a"
This caused build failures when building Clang and libc++ together on Mac:

  fatal error: 'experimental/memory_resource' file not found

See the code review for details. Reverting until the problem and how to
solve it is better understood.

(Updates to some test files were not reverted, since they seemed
unrelated and were later updated by 340b48b267b96.)

> This is the first part of a plan to ship experimental features
> by default while guarding them behind a compiler flag to avoid
> users accidentally depending on them. Subsequent patches will
> also encompass incomplete features (such as <format> and <ranges>)
> in that categorization. Basically, the idea is that we always
> build and ship the c++experimental library, however users can't
> use what's in it unless they pass the `-funstable` flag to Clang.
>
> Note that this patch intentionally does not start guarding
> existing <experimental/FOO> content behind the flag, because
> that would merely break users that might be relying on such
> content being in the headers unconditionally. Instead, we
> should start guarding new TSes behind the flag, and get rid
> of the existing TSes we have by shipping their Standard
> counterpart.
>
> Also, this patch must jump through a few hoops like defining
> _LIBCPP_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL because we still support compilers
> that do not implement -funstable yet.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128927

This reverts commit bb939931a1adb9a47a2de13c359d6a72aeb277c8.
2022-07-18 16:57:15 +02:00
Louis Dionne
bb939931a1 [libc++] Always build c++experimental.a
This is the first part of a plan to ship experimental features
by default while guarding them behind a compiler flag to avoid
users accidentally depending on them. Subsequent patches will
also encompass incomplete features (such as <format> and <ranges>)
in that categorization. Basically, the idea is that we always
build and ship the c++experimental library, however users can't
use what's in it unless they pass the `-funstable` flag to Clang.

Note that this patch intentionally does not start guarding
existing <experimental/FOO> content behind the flag, because
that would merely break users that might be relying on such
content being in the headers unconditionally. Instead, we
should start guarding new TSes behind the flag, and get rid
of the existing TSes we have by shipping their Standard
counterpart.

Also, this patch must jump through a few hoops like defining
_LIBCPP_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL because we still support compilers
that do not implement -funstable yet.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128927
2022-07-08 16:58:22 -04:00
Mark de Wever
8aa596584a [libc++][doc] Removes a colon in a title. 2022-07-07 19:07:03 +02:00
Ilya Biryukov
374f938fe8 [libcxx] Fix allocator<void>::pointer in C++20 with removed members
When compiled with `-D_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_ALLOCATOR_MEMBERS`
uses of `allocator<void>::pointer` resulted in compiler errors after D104323.
If we instantiate the primary template, `allocator<void>::reference` produces
an error 'cannot form references to void'.

To workaround this, allow to bring back the `allocator<void>` specialization by defining the new `_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_ALLOCATOR_VOID_SPECIALIZATION` macro.

To make sure the code that uses `allocator<void>` and the removed members does not break,
both `_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_ALLOCATOR_MEMBERS` and `_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_ALLOCATOR_MEMBERS` have to be defined.

Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, philnik

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126210
2022-06-15 10:55:56 +02:00
Louis Dionne
2ae52326da [libc++] Towards a simpler extern template story in libc++
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
2022-06-08 22:05:07 -04:00
Louis Dionne
f3966eaf86 [libc++] Make the Debug mode a configuration-time only option
The debug mode has been broken pretty much ever since it was shipped
because it was possible to enable the debug mode in user code without
actually enabling it in the dylib, leading to ODR violations that
caused various kinds of failures.

This commit makes the debug mode a knob that is configured when
building the library and which can't be changed afterwards. This is
less flexible for users, however it will actually work as intended
and it will allow us, in the future, to add various kinds of checks
that do not assume the same ABI as the normal library. Furthermore,
this will make the debug mode more robust, which means that vendors
might be more tempted to support it properly, which hasn't been the
case with the current debug mode.

This patch shouldn't break any user code, except folks who are building
against a library that doesn't have the debug mode enabled and who try
to enable the debug mode in their code. Such users will get a compile-time
error explaining that this configuration isn't supported anymore.

In the future, we should further increase the granularity of the debug
mode checks so that we can cherry-pick which checks to enable, like we
do for unspecified behavior randomization.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122941
2022-06-07 16:33:53 -04:00
Louis Dionne
385cc25a53 [libc++] Ensure that all public C++ headers include <__assert>
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
2022-03-30 15:05:31 -04:00
Louis Dionne
b0fd9497af [libc++] Add a lightweight overridable assertion handler
This patch adds a lightweight assertion handler mechanism that can be
overriden at link-time in a fashion similar to `operator new`.

This is a third take on https://llvm.org/D121123 (which allowed customizing
the assertion handler at compile-time), and https://llvm.org/D119969
(which allowed customizing the assertion handler at runtime only).

This approach is, I think, the best of all three explored approaches.
Indeed, replacing the assertion handler in user code is ergonomic,
yet we retain the ability to provide a custom assertion handler when
deploying to older platforms that don't have a default handler in
the dylib.

As-is, this patch provides a pretty good amount of backwards compatibility
with the previous debug mode:

- Code that used to set _LIBCPP_DEBUG=0 in order to get basic assertions
  in their code will still get basic assertions out of the box, but
  those assertions will be using the new assertion handler support.
- Code that was previously compiled with references to __libcpp_debug_function
  and friends will work out-of-the-box, no changes required. This is
  because we provide the same symbols in the dylib as we used to.
- Code that used to set a custom __libcpp_debug_function will stop
  compiling, because we don't provide that declaration anymore. Users
  will have to migrate to the new way of setting a custom assertion
  handler, which is extremely easy. I suspect that pool of users is
  very limited, so breaking them at compile-time is probably acceptable.

The main downside of this approach is that code being compiled with
assertions enabled but deploying to an older platform where the assertion
handler didn't exist yet will fail to compile. However users can easily
fix the problem by providing a custom assertion handler and defining
the _LIBCPP_AVAILABILITY_CUSTOM_ASSERTION_HANDLER_PROVIDED macro to
let the library know about the custom handler. In a way, this is
actually a feature because it avoids a load-time error that one would
otherwise get when trying to run the code on the older target.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121478
2022-03-23 15:35:46 -04:00
Louis Dionne
b1fb3d75c9 [libc++] Implement C++20's P0476R2: std::bit_cast
Thanks to Arthur O'Dwyer for fixing up some of the tests.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75960
2021-09-09 11:05:54 -04:00
Louis Dionne
ff7a332e6f [libc++] Revert OpenBSD-related changes to the documentation
This commit partially reverts 0954e2b2d038 and 3fa4cff97480, which
make changes to the libc++ documentation implifying that OpenBSD is
supported. Neither of these changes have been reviewed AFAICT, so
I'm reverting as a matter of enforcing:

1. That changes get reviewed before being committed
2. That we have a discussion and a support plan for supporting
   OpenBSD officially in libc++

Please note that I would be thrilled to support OpenBSD officially in
libc++, however doing so requires more than adding a note in the docs.
In particular, please make sure you read the note in [1] about setting
up CI testing for OpenBSD.

[1]: https://libcxx.llvm.org/#platform-and-compiler-support

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109373
2021-09-08 15:55:03 -04:00
Brad Smith
3fa4cff974 Mention OpenBSD in the documentation 2021-09-07 07:55:17 -04:00
Louis Dionne
2ce0df4dfb [libc++][docs] Overhaul the documentation for building and using libc++
This patch overhauls the documentation around building libc++
for vendors, and using libc++ for end-users. It also:

- Removes mention of the standalone build, which we've been trying to
  get rid of for a long time.
- Removes mention of using a local ABI installation, which we don't do
  and is documented as "not recommended".
- Removes mention of the separate libc++filesystem.a library, which isn't
  relevant anymore since filesystem support is in the main library.
- Adds mention of the GDB pretty printers and how to use them.
2021-07-06 14:09:14 -04:00
wmbat
2ff5a56e1a [libcxx][type_traits] remove std::is_literal_type and std::result_of for C++20
C++17 deprecated `std::is_literal_type` and `std::result_of`, C++20 removed them.

Implements parts of:
    * P0174R2 'Deprecating Vestigial Library Parts in C++17'.
    * P0619R4 'Reviewing Deprecated Facilities of C++17 for C++20'.

Reviewed By: ldionne, Mordante, Quuxplusone, #libc

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102992
2021-07-02 17:10:19 +00:00
Louis Dionne
87784cc6fb [libc++] Undeprecate the std::allocator<void> specialization
While the std::allocator<void> specialization was deprecated by
https://wg21.link/p0174#2.2, the *use* of std::allocator<void> by users
was not. The intent was that std::allocator<void> could still be used
in C++17 and C++20, but starting with C++20 (with the removal of the
specialization), std::allocator<void> would use the primary template.
That intent was called out in wg21.link/p0619r4#3.9.

As a result of this patch, _LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_ALLOCATOR_MEMBERS
will also not control whether the explicit specialization is provided or
not. It shouldn't matter, since in C++20, one can simply use the primary
template.

Fixes http://llvm.org/PR50299

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104323
2021-06-16 09:54:29 -04:00
Arthur O'Dwyer
dc066888bd [libc++] [P0619] Add _LIBCPP_ABI_NO_BINDER_BASES and remove binder typedefs in C++20.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103753
2021-06-15 15:05:44 -04:00
Arthur O'Dwyer
d42d9e10b6 [libc++] [P0619] Hide not1 and not2 under _LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_NEGATORS.
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
2021-05-25 16:57:16 -04:00
Louis Dionne
a3ab5120fd [libc++] Rewrite the tuple constructors to be strictly Standards conforming
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
2021-04-23 12:46:37 -04:00
Jennifer Chukwu
21bef4e11e [NFC] Fixed Typos
Reviewed By: xgupta

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100705
2021-04-17 22:02:23 +05:30
Arthur O'Dwyer
4b7bad9eae [libc++] Implement D2351R0 "Mark all library static cast wrappers as [[nodiscard]]"
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
2021-04-12 12:29:15 -04:00
Marek Kurdej
044b892c79 [libc++] Use c++20 instead of c++2a consistently.
* 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
2021-01-07 13:11:33 +01:00
Sylvestre Ledru
72fd1033ea Doc: Links should use https 2020-03-22 22:49:33 +01:00
Louis Dionne
86dd28a547 [libc++] Use [[nodiscard]] for lock_guard, as an extension
Summary:
D64914 added support for applying [[nodiscard]] to constructors. This
commit uses that capability to flag incorrect uses of std::lock_guard
where one forgets to actually create a variable for the lock_guard.

rdar://45790820

Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF

Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, Quuxplusone, lebedev.ri

Tags: #libc

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65900

llvm-svn: 368664
2019-08-13 11:12:28 +00:00
Louis Dionne
776acf225b [libcxx] Slightly improved policy for handling experimental features
Summary:
Following the discussion on the libcxx-dev mailing list
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/libcxx-dev/2019-May/000358.html),
this implements the new policy for handling experimental features and
their deprecation. We basically add a deprecation warning for
std::experimental::filesystem, and we remove a bunch of <experimental/*>
headers that were now empty.

Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF

Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, libcxx-commits, jfb

Tags: #libc

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62428

llvm-svn: 363072
2019-06-11 14:48:40 +00:00
J. Ryan Stinnett
d45eaf9405 [Docs] Modernize references to macOS
Summary:
This updates all places in documentation that refer to "Mac OS X", "OS X", etc.
to instead use the modern name "macOS" when no specific version number is
mentioned.

If a specific version is mentioned, this attempts to use the OS name at the time
of that version:

* Mac OS X for 10.0 - 10.7
* OS X for 10.8 - 10.11
* macOS for 10.12 - present

Reviewers: JDevlieghere

Subscribers: mgorny, christof, arphaman, cfe-commits, lldb-commits, libcxx-commits, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang, #lldb, #libc, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62654

llvm-svn: 362113
2019-05-30 16:46:22 +00:00
Nico Weber
1362d7ef88 libcxx: Add _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT to 38 more functions
This builds on the work done in r342808 and adds _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT
to 37 more functions, namely:

adjacent_find, all_of, any_of, binary_search, clamp, count_if, count,
equal_range, equal, find_end, find_first_not_of, find_first_of, find_if,
find, includes, is_heap_until, is_heap, is_partitioned, is_permutation,
is_sorted_until, is_sorted, lexicographical_compare, lower_bound,
max_element, max, min_element, min, minmax_element, minmax, mismatch,
none_of, remove_if, remove, search_n, search, unique, upper_bound

The motivation here is that we noticed that find_if is nodiscard with
Visual Studio's standard library, and we deemed that useful
(https://crbug.com/948122).
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/cppblog/c17-progress-in-vs-2017-15-5-and-15-6/
says "Our criteria for emitting the warning are: discarding the return
value is a guaranteed leak [...], discarding the return value is
near-guaranteed to be incorrect (e.g. remove()/remove_if()/unique()), or
the function is essentially a pure observer (e.g. vector::empty() and
std::is_sorted())." so I went through algorithm and tried to apply these
criteria.

Some of these, like vector::empty() are already nodiscard per C++
standard and didn't need changing.

I didn't (yet?) go over std::string::find* methods which should probably
have _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT too (but not as part of this change).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60145

llvm-svn: 357619
2019-04-03 18:13:08 +00:00
Louis Dionne
952387251e [libc++] Re-document how to use <filesystem> with various versions of libc++
This documentation was removed when we added <filesystem> to the dylib
in r356518, but it really should have been updated to reflect the new
state of things. Keeping documentation around doesn't hurt and users
will have an easier time migrating.

llvm-svn: 356681
2019-03-21 16:21:09 +00:00
Louis Dionne
cc37af7a36 [libc++] Build <filesystem> support as part of the dylib
Summary:
This patch treats <filesystem> as a first-class citizen of the dylib,
like all other sub-libraries (e.g. <chrono>). As such, it also removes
all special handling for installing the filesystem library separately
or disabling part of the test suite from the lit command line.

Unlike the previous attempt (r356500), this doesn't remove all the
filesystem tests.

Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, serge-sans-paille

Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jfb, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59152

llvm-svn: 356518
2019-03-19 20:56:13 +00:00
Louis Dionne
f7b43230b8 Revert "[libc++] Build <filesystem> support as part of the dylib"
When I applied r356500 (https://reviews.llvm.org/D59152), I somehow
deleted all of filesystem's tests. I will revert r356500 and re-apply
it properly.

llvm-svn: 356505
2019-03-19 19:27:29 +00:00
Louis Dionne
72122d058b [libc++] Build <filesystem> support as part of the dylib
Summary:
This patch treats <filesystem> as a first-class citizen of the dylib,
like all other sub-libraries (e.g. <chrono>). As such, it also removes
all special handling for installing the filesystem library separately
or disabling part of the test suite from the lit command line.

Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF, serge-sans-paille

Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jfb, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59152

llvm-svn: 356500
2019-03-19 19:09:33 +00:00
Louis Dionne
a470a13a70 [libc++] Enable deprecation warnings by default
Summary:
In r342843, I added deprecation warnings to some facilities that were
deprectated in C++14 and C++17. However, those deprecation warnings
were not enabled by default.

After discussing this on IRC, we had finally gotten consensus to enable
those warnings by default, and I'm getting around to doing that only
now.

Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF

Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jdoerfert, libcxx-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58140

llvm-svn: 355961
2019-03-12 20:10:06 +00:00
Louis Dionne
3560fbf304 [libc++] Improve diagnostics for non-const comparators and hashers in associative containers
Summary:
When providing a non-const-callable comparator in a map or set, the
warning diagnostic does not include the point of instantiation of
the container that triggered the warning, which makes it difficult
to track down the problem. This commit improves the diagnostic by
placing it directly in the body of the associative container.

The same change is applied to unordered associative containers, which
had a similar problem.

Finally, this commit cleans up the forward declarations of several
map and unordered_map helpers, which are not needed anymore.

<rdar://problem/41370747>

Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists

Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48955

llvm-svn: 348529
2018-12-06 21:46:17 +00:00
Louis Dionne
ea5cd3b476 [libc++] Add deprecated attributes to many deprecated components
Summary:
These deprecation warnings are opt-in: they are only enabled when the
_LIBCXX_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS macro is defined, which is not the case
by default. Note that this is a first step in the right direction, but
I wasn't able to get an exhaustive list of all deprecated components
per standard, so there's certainly stuff that's missing. The list of
components this commit marks as deprecated is:

in C++11:
- auto_ptr, auto_ptr_ref
- binder1st, binder2nd, bind1st(), bind2nd()
- pointer_to_unary_function, pointer_to_binary_function, ptr_fun()
- mem_fun_t, mem_fun1_t, const_mem_fun_t, const_mem_fun1_t, mem_fun()
- mem_fun_ref_t, mem_fun1_ref_t, const_mem_fun_ref_t, const_mem_fun1_ref_t, mem_fun_ref()

in C++14:
- random_shuffle()

in C++17:
- unary_negate, binary_negate, not1(), not2()

<rdar://problem/18168350>

Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF

Subscribers: christof, dexonsmith, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48912

llvm-svn: 342843
2018-09-23 18:35:00 +00:00
Roman Lebedev
c65d39a464 [libc++] Add _LIBCPP_ENABLE_NODISCARD and _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT to allow pre-C++2a [[nodiscard]]
Summary:
The `[[nodiscard]]` attribute is intended to help users find bugs where
function return values are ignored when they shouldn't be. After C++17 the
C++ standard has started to declared such library functions as `[[nodiscard]]`.
However, this application is limited and applies only to dialects after C++17.
Users who want help diagnosing misuses of STL functions may desire a more
liberal application of `[[nodiscard]]`.

For this reason libc++ provides an extension that does just that! The
extension must be enabled by defining `_LIBCPP_ENABLE_NODISCARD`. The extended
applications of `[[nodiscard]]` takes two forms:

1. Backporting `[[nodiscard]]` to entities declared as such by the
   standard in newer dialects, but not in the present one.

2. Extended applications of `[[nodiscard]]`, at the libraries discretion,
   applied to entities never declared as such by the standard.

Users may also opt-out of additional applications `[[nodiscard]]` using
additional macros.

Applications of the first form, which backport `[[nodiscard]]` from a newer
dialect may be disabled using macros specific to the dialect it was added. For
example `_LIBCPP_DISABLE_NODISCARD_AFTER_CXX17`.

Applications of the second form, which are pure extensions, may be disabled
by defining `_LIBCPP_DISABLE_NODISCARD_EXT`.

This patch was originally written by me (Roman Lebedev),
then but then reworked by Eric Fiselier.

Reviewers: mclow.lists, thakis, EricWF

Reviewed By: thakis, EricWF

Subscribers: llvm-commits, mclow.lists, lebedev.ri, EricWF, rjmccall, Quuxplusone, cfe-commits, christof

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45179

llvm-svn: 342808
2018-09-22 17:54:48 +00:00
Eric Fiselier
998a5c8831 Implement <filesystem>
This patch implements the <filesystem> header and uses that
to provide <experimental/filesystem>.

Unlike other standard headers, the symbols needed for <filesystem>
have not yet been placed in libc++.so. Instead they live in the
new libc++fs.a library. Users of filesystem are required to link this
library. (Also note that libc++experimental no longer contains the
definition of <experimental/filesystem>, which now requires linking libc++fs).

The reason for keeping <filesystem> out of the dylib for now is that
it's still somewhat experimental, and the possibility of requiring an
ABI breaking change is very real. In the future the symbols will likely
be moved into the dylib, or the dylib will be made to link libc++fs automagically).

Note that moving the symbols out of libc++experimental may break user builds
until they update to -lc++fs. This should be OK, because the experimental
library provides no stability guarantees. However, I plan on looking into
ways we can force libc++experimental to automagically link libc++fs.

In order to use a single implementation and set of tests for <filesystem>, it
has been placed in a special `__fs` namespace. This namespace is inline in
C++17 onward, but not before that. As such implementation is available
in C++11 onward, but no filesystem namespace is present "directly", and
as such name conflicts shouldn't occur in C++11 or C++14.

llvm-svn: 338093
2018-07-27 03:07:09 +00:00
Shoaib Meenai
492d7134f3 [libc++] Support Microsoft ABI without vcruntime headers
The vcruntime headers are hairy and clash with both libc++ headers
themselves and other libraries. libc++ normally deals with the clashes
by deferring to the vcruntime headers and silencing its own definitions,
but for clients which don't want to depend on vcruntime headers, it's
desirable to support the opposite, i.e. have libc++ provide its own
definitions.

Certain operator new/delete replacement scenarios are not currently
supported in this mode, which requires some tests to be marked XFAIL.
The added documentation has more details.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38522

llvm-svn: 315234
2017-10-09 19:25:17 +00:00
Shoaib Meenai
461764de0d [libc++] Add _LIBCPP_DISABLE_EXTERN_TEMPLATE config option
When the libc++ extern template macros were added, the intent was for it
to be possible for consumers of the headers to disable extern templates
(via `-D_LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE(...)=`). Unfortunately, support for
specifying function-like macros varies on the command line varies across
compilers (e.g. MSVC doesn't support it at all), and cmake doesn't allow
it for the same reason. Add a non-function macro for this purpose.

The intended use is for libraries which want to use the libc++ headers
without taking a dependency on the libc++ library itself. I can name the
macro something which reflects its intent rather than its behavior (e.g.
`_LIBCPP_HEADER_ONLY`) if desired.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31725

llvm-svn: 300246
2017-04-13 20:13:32 +00:00
Eric Fiselier
07e93d3b00 Add doc for _LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_DISABLED_AUTO_PTR and make it work under _LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_FEATURES
llvm-svn: 295407
2017-02-17 03:30:25 +00:00