This moves the definition of a `pair` constructor for `<tuple>` to
`<__utility/pair.h>` and uses the forward declaration of `pair` in
`<tuple>` instead of including the definition.
The exposition-only type trait `pair-like` includes `ranges::subrange`,
but in every single case excludes `ranges::subrange` from the list. This
patch introduces two new traits `__tuple_like_no_subrange` and
`__pair_like_no_subrange`, which exclude `ranges::subrange` from the
possible matches. `__pair_like` is no longer required, and thus removed.
`__tuple_like` is implemented as `__tuple_like_no_subrange` or a
`ranges::subrange` specialization.
## Abstract
This pull request converts the `operator()` of all CPOs and niebloids
related to C++23 ranges to `static`.
## Motivation
In `libc++`, CPOs and niebloids are implemented as function objects.
Currently, the `operator()` for such a function object is a
`const`-qualified member function. This means that even if the function
object is has no data members, an extra register is used to pass in the
`this` pointer when calling `operator()`, unless the compiler can inline
the function call. Declaraing `operator()` as `static` would optimize
away the unnecessary `this` pointer passing for stateless function
objects, since there is no object instance state that needs to be
accessed.
## Reference
- [P1169R4: static `operator()`](https://wg21.link/P1169R4)
## Abstract
This pull request removes the `__workaround_52970` concept. This concept
is a workaround for a bug described in #52970, which causes the compiler
to trigger ADL on a pointer to an incomplete type in an SFINAE context.
This bug is fixed in Clang 14.
## Reference
- [[clang] Don't typo-fix an expression in a SFINAE
context](https://reviews.llvm.org/D117603)
- [[libc++] [ranges] ADL-proof the [range.access]
CPOs.](https://reviews.llvm.org/D116239)
## Abstract
This pull request implements LWG3715: `view_interface::empty` is
overconstrained. Here is an example similar to those described in the
report, which compiles with `-stdlib=libstdc++` but failed to compile
with `-stdlib=libc++`:
```cpp
// https://godbolt.org/z/EWEoTzah3
std::istringstream input("1 2 3 4 5");
auto i = std::views::istream<int>(input);
auto r = std::views::counted(i.begin(), 4) | std::views::take(2);
assert(!r.empty());
```
## Reference
- [Draft C++ Standard:
[view.interface.general]](https://eel.is/c++draft/view.interface.general)
- [LWG3715](https://wg21.link/LWG3715)
These headers have become very small by using compiler builtins, often
containing only two declarations. This merges these headers, since
there doesn't seem to be much of a benefit keeping them separate.
Specifically, `is_{,_nothrow,_trivially}{assignable,constructible}` are
kept and the `copy`, `move` and `default` versions of these type traits
are moved in to the respective headers.
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
We recently noticed that the unwrap_iter.h file was pushing macros, but
it was pushing them again instead of popping them at the end of the
file. This led to libc++ basically swallowing any custom definition of
these macros in user code:
#define min HELLO
#include <algorithm>
// min is not HELLO anymore, it's not defined
While investigating this issue, I noticed that our push/pop pragmas were
actually entirely wrong too. Indeed, instead of pushing macros like
`move`, we'd push `move(int, int)` in the pragma, which is not a valid
macro name. As a result, we would not actually push macros like `move`
-- instead we'd simply undefine them. This led to the following code not
working:
#define move HELLO
#include <algorithm>
// move is not HELLO anymore
Fixing the pragma push/pop incantations led to a cascade of issues
because we use identifiers like `move` in a large number of places, and
all of these headers would now need to do the push/pop dance.
This patch fixes all these issues. First, it adds a check that we don't
swallow important names like min, max, move or refresh as explained
above. This is done by augmenting the existing
system_reserved_names.gen.py test to also check that the macros are what
we expect after including each header.
Second, it fixes the push/pop pragmas to work properly and adds missing
pragmas to all the files I could detect a failure in via the newly added
test.
rdar://121365472
The tag name was long for an ABI tag. The name was misleading too, the
tag is first introduced in LLVM 18 in 2024 and not in 2023.
---------
Co-authored-by: Louis Dionne <ldionne.2@gmail.com>
Also introduce `_LIBCPP_ASSERT_PEDANTIC` for assertions violating which
results in a no-op or other benign behavior, but which may nevertheless
indicate a bug in the invoking code.
fixes#70506
The detailed problem description is in #70506
The original proposed fix was to remove `[[no_unique_address]]` except
when `_Tp` is empty.
Edit:
After the discussion in the comments below, the new fix here is to
remove the `[[no_unique_address]]` from `movable_box` in the cases where
we need to add our own assignment operator, which has contains the
problematic `construct_at`
As pointed out in #72883, the implementation only needs to return the
value of ranges::next and does not need to obtain the value through
ranges::advance, which causes it to have O(n) complexity in the case
of random-access-sized but non-common range.
Fixes#72883
Currently, when libc++'s views::take specially handles an iota_view, the
addition is done after dereferencing the beginning iterator. However, in
[range.take.overview]/2.3, the addition is done before the dereferencing,
which means that the standard requires the returned iota_view to have
the same W and Bound type in such cases.
This patch fixes that, and also fixes a test that was testing the
incorrect behavior.
Fixes#75611
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
Fixes#75002. Found while running libc++'s tests with MSVC's STL.
This is a superset of #74961 that also fixes the product code
and adds a regression test. Thanks again, @cpplearner!
To summarize: `views::split` and `views::lazy_split` aren't unary,
aren't range adaptor **closure** objects, and can't be piped. However,
\[range.adaptor.object\]/8 says that `views::split(pattern)` and
`views::lazy_split(pattern)` produce unary, pipeable, range adaptor
closure objects.
This PR adjusts the test coverage accordingly, allowing it to portably
pass for libc++ and MSVC's STL.
Before this patch, we would fail to implicitly convert the result of
predicates to bool, which means we'd potentially perform a copy or move
construction of the boolean-testable, which isn't allowed. The same
holds true for comparing iterators against sentinels, which is allowed
to return a boolean-testable type.
We already had tests aiming to ensure correct handling of these types,
but they failed to provide appropriate coverage in several cases due to
guaranteed RVO. This patch fixes the tests, adds tests for missing
algorithms and views, and fixes the actual problems in the code.
Fixes#69074
This updates the clang-format we use in libc++ to 17. This is necessary
to start running the generated-files checks in GitHub Actions (in
#68920). In fact this is a pre-existing issue regardless of #68920 --
right now our ignore_format.txt job disagrees with the LLVM-wide
clang-format job.
We were incorrectly deducing the return type of size() because we were
not using ternary operators in the implementation (as the spec says).
Instead of deducing the common type of the expressions in the spec, we
would deduce potentially different return types and fail to compile.
Fixes#67551
Since LLVM 17 has been branched and is on the verge of being released,
we can drop the CI job that tests against Clang 15. I think the number
of cherry-picks to `release/17.x` will be a lot smaller now, so keeping
a Clang 15 job around for that purpose seems unnecessary.
As a fly-by, this patch also removes some Clang 15 workarounds and test
suite annotations as we usually do. It also removes some slightly older
gcc test suite annotations that were missed.
POSIX allows certain macros to exist with generic names (i.e. refresh(), move(), and erase()) to exist in `curses.h` which conflict with functions found in std::filesystem, among others. This patch undefs the macros in question and adds them to LIBCPP_PUSH_MACROS and LIBCPP_POP_MACROS.
Reviewed By: #libc, philnik, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147356
Some modules export modules that they don't import (i.e. that their header doesn't directly include). That sometimes works when the exported submodule is in the same module, but when the `std` mega module is broken up (D144322), some of the exports stop working. Make the exports and includes consistent, either by adding includes for the exports, or by removing exports for missing includes.
The `concepts.equality_comparable` export in `std.iterator.__iterator.concepts` isn't doing anything because 1) it's resolved as `std.iterator.__iterator.concepts.equality_comparable` and 2) there's a `__concepts` submodule in between `std.concepts` and `equality_comparable`. Fix it to be `std.concepts.__concepts.equality_comparable`.
<span> is listed in both `std.span` and `std.experimental.span`. Delete the latter module.
There is no `__errc` module or header, so remove that export from `std.system_error`.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D153211
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
Implement P2494R2 `Relaxing range adaptors to allow for move only types`
https://open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2022/p2494r2.html#wording-ftm
According to the words in P2494R2, I haven't add new test for `drop_while_view`, `take_while_view` and `filter_view`, because these views has the requirement that the predicate is an `indirect_unary_predicate`, which requires that the predicate is `copy_constructible`, so they still can't accept move only types as predicate.
```
[P2483R0] also suggests future work to relax the requirements on the predicate types stored by standard views. This paper does not perform this relaxation, as the copy constructibility requirement is enshrined in the indirect callable concepts ([indirectcallable.indirectinvocable]). Thus, while this paper modifies the views that currently use copyable-box for user provided predicates, it only does so to apply the rename of the exposition-only type to movable-box; it does not change any of the constraints on those views. It does, however, relax the requirements on invocables accepted by the transform family of views, because those are not constrained using the indirect callable concepts.
```
Reviewed By: #libc, var-const
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151629
We plan to add concepts for checking that iterators actually provide what they claim to. This is to avoid people thinking that these type traits actually check the iterator requirements in more detail.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: Mordante, libcxx-commits, wenlei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150801
One of the overload of the constructors should check Bound is not unreachable_sentinel_t, instead of the Start
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150206
- add the `from_range_t` constructors and the related deduction guides;
- add the `insert_range`/`assign_range`/etc. member functions.
(Note: this patch is split from https://reviews.llvm.org/D142335)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149826
Several headers are missing includes for things they use.
type_traits.is_enum needs to export type_traits.integral_constant so that clients can access its `value` member without explicitly including __type_traits/integral_constant.h themselves.
Make `subrange_fwd` a peer submodule to `subrange` rather than a submodule of it, and have `subrange` export `subrange_fwd`. That will make it easier to programmatically generate modules for the private detail headers, and it will accomplish the same effect that __ranges/subrange.h will make subrange_kind visible.
Reviewed By: Mordante, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150055
This was discovered while working on modules. They can't export
declarations with internal linkage.
Reviewed By: #libc, philnik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149593
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
This change is almost fully mechanical. The only interesting change is in `generate_feature_test_macro_components.py` to generate `_LIBCPP_STD_VER >=` instead. To avoid churn in the git-blame this commit should be added to the `.git-blame-ignore-revs` once committed.
Reviewed By: ldionne, var-const, #libc
Spies: jloser, libcxx-commits, arichardson, arphaman, wenlei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143962