This patch implements the forwarding to frozen C++03 headers as
discussed in
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-freezing-c-03-headers-in-libc. In the
RFC, we initially proposed selecting the right headers from the Clang
driver, however consensus seemed to steer towards handling this in the
library itself. This patch implements that direction.
At a high level, the changes basically amount to making each public
header look like this:
```
// inside <vector>
#ifdef _LIBCPP_CXX03_LANG
# include <__cxx03/vector>
#else
// normal <vector> content
#endif
```
In most cases, public headers are simple umbrella headers so there isn't
much code in the #else branch. In other cases, the #else branch contains
the actual implementation of the header.
We forward declare `reference_wrapper` in multiple places already. This
moves the declaration to the canonical place and removes unnecessary
includes of `__functional/reference_wrapper.h`.
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
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
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
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
We should not surface CMake-level options like LIBCXX_ENABLE_FILESYSTEM
to our users, since they don't know what it means. Instead, use a slightly
more general wording.
Also, add an error in <ios> to improve the quality of errors for people
trying to use <iostream> when localization is disabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125910
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
The NFC part of D116809. We still want to enforce this in CI,
but the mechanism for that is still to-be-determined.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116809
Implement P1989R2 which adds a range constructor for `string_view`.
Adjust `operator/=` in `path` to avoid atomic constraints caching issue
getting provoked from this PR.
Add defaulted template argument to `string_view`'s "sufficient
overloads" to avoid mangling issues in `clang-cl` builds. It is a
MSVC mangling bug that this works around.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113161
Rework `std::filesystem::path::operator==` and friends to avoid overload
resolution and atomic constraint caching issues shown from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D113161.
Always call `__compare(string_view)` from the comparison operators which avoids
overload resolution.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114570
In 1fa27f2a10e8, we made <filesystem>'s iterator types model concepts
from <ranges>, but we forgot to add the appropriate availability
annotations. This broke back-deployment to platforms that don't have
<filesystem> for which we have availability annotations.
For some reason, this wasn't caught by our back-deployment CI.
I believe this is due to the fact that we use a slightly older
compiler in the CI, and perhaps that compiler does not honour
our `#pragma clang attribute push` properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114456
We've stopped doing it in libc++ for a while now because these names
would end up rotting as we move things around and copy/paste stuff.
This cleans up all the existing files so as to stop the spreading
as people copy-paste headers around.
The path functions in this patch are unimplemented (as per the TODO comment from upstream). To avoid running into a linker error (missing symbol), this patch raises a compile error by commenting out the functions, which is more user friendly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111892
Implement LWG3480 which enables `directory_iterator` and
`recursive_directory_iterator` to be both a `borrowed_range` and a
`view`.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111644
Some embedded platforms do not wish to support the C library functionality
for handling wchar_t because they have no use for it. It makes sense for
libc++ to work properly on those platforms, so this commit adds a carve-out
of functionality for wchar_t.
Unfortunately, unlike some other carve-outs (e.g. random device), this
patch touches several parts of the library. However, despite the wide
impact of this patch, I still think it is important to support this
configuration since it makes it much simpler to port libc++ to some
embedded platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111265
The error message for disabled filesystem and locale support is now done
in the same fashion as ranges and format in D106763.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106935
Moves:
* `std::move`, `std::forward`, `std::declval`, and `std::swap` into
`__utility/${FUNCTION_NAME}`.
* `std::swap_ranges` and `std::iter_swap` into
`__algorithm/${FUNCTION_NAME}`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103734
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
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
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 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
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
- 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