| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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LLVM uses .h as its extension for header files.
Files renamed using:
for f in libcxx/test/support/*.hpp; do git mv $f ${f%.hpp}.h; done
References to the files updated using:
for f in $(git diff master | grep 'rename from' | cut -f 3 -d ' '); do
a=$(basename $f);
echo $a;
rg -l $a libcxx | xargs sed -i '' "s/$a/${a%.hpp}.h/";
done
HPP include guards updated manually using:
for f in $(git diff master | grep 'rename from' | cut -f 3 -d ' '); do
echo ${f%.hpp}.h ;
done | xargs mvim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66104
llvm-svn: 369481
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Thanks to Zoe for the (big, but simple) patch. NFC intended.
llvm-svn: 362252
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Summary: Completes P0357R3, which was merged into the C++20 Working Draft in San Diego.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54722
llvm-svn: 357423
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Summary:
Freestanding is *weird*. The standard allows it to differ in a bunch of odd
manners from regular C++, and the committee would like to improve that
situation. I'd like to make libc++ behave better with what freestanding should
be, so that it can be a tool we use in improving the standard. To do that we
need to try stuff out, both with "freestanding the language mode" and
"freestanding the library subset".
Let's start with the super basic: run the libc++ tests in freestanding, using
clang as the compiler, and see what works. The easiest hack to do this:
In utils/libcxx/test/config.py add:
self.cxx.compile_flags += ['-ffreestanding']
Run the tests and they all fail.
Why? Because in freestanding `main` isn't special. This "not special" property
has two effects: main doesn't get mangled, and main isn't allowed to omit its
`return` statement. The first means main gets mangled and the linker can't
create a valid executable for us to test. The second means we spew out warnings
(ew) and the compiler doesn't insert the `return` we omitted, and main just
falls of the end and does whatever undefined behavior (if you're luck, ud2
leading to non-zero return code).
Let's start my work with the basics. This patch changes all libc++ tests to
declare `main` as `int main(int, char**` so it mangles consistently (enabling us
to declare another `extern "C"` main for freestanding which calls the mangled
one), and adds `return 0;` to all places where it was missing. This touches 6124
files, and I apologize.
The former was done with The Magic Of Sed.
The later was done with a (not quite correct but decent) clang tool:
https://gist.github.com/jfbastien/793819ff360baa845483dde81170feed
This works for most tests, though I did have to adjust a few places when e.g.
the test runs with `-x c`, macros are used for main (such as for the filesystem
tests), etc.
Once this is in we can create a freestanding bot which will prevent further
regressions. After that, we can start the real work of supporting C++
freestanding fairly well in libc++.
<rdar://problem/47754795>
Reviewers: ldionne, mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, miyuki, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57624
llvm-svn: 353086
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to reflect the new license. These used slightly different spellings that
defeated my regular expressions.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351648
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Summary:
This patch rewrites the C++03 `__invoke` and related meta-programming. There are a number of major changes.
`__invoke` in C++03 now has a fallback overload for when the invoke expression is ill-formed (similar to C++11). This means that the `__invoke_return` traits will return `__nat` when `__invoke(...)` is ill formed. This would previously cause a compile error.
Bullets 1-4 of `__invoke` have been rewritten. In the old version `__invoke` had 32 overloads for bullets 1 and 2,
one for each possible cv-qualified function signature with arities 0-3. 64 overloads would be needed to support member functions
with varargs. Currently these overloads were fundamentally broken. An example overload looked like:
```
template <class Rp, class Tp, class T1, class A0>
Rp __invoke(Rp (Tp::*pm)(A0) const, T1&, A0&)
```
Because `A0` appeared in two different deducible contexts it would have to deduce to be an exact match or the overload
would be rejected. This is made even worse because `A0` appears without a reference qualifier in the member function signature
and with a reference qualifier as an `__invoke` parameter. This means that only member functions that took all
of their arguments by value could be matched.
One possible fix would be to make the second occurrence of `A0` appear in a non-deducible context. This way
any type convertible to `A0` could be passed as the first parameter. The benefit of this approach is that the
signature of the member function enforces the arity and types taken by the `__invoke` signature it generates. However
nothing in the `INVOKE` specification requires this behavior.
My solution is to use a `__invoke_enable_if<PM_Type, Tp>` metafunction to selectively enable the `__invoke` overloads for bullets 1, 2, 3 and 4. It uses `__member_function_traits` to inspect and extract the return type and class type of the pointer to member. Using `__member_function_traits` to inspect `PM_Type` also allows us to reduce the number of `__invoke` overloads from 32 to 8 and add
varargs support at the same time.
Because `__invoke_enable_if` knows the exact return type of `__invoke` for bullets 1-4 we no longer need to use `decltype(__invoke(...))` to
compute the return type in the `__invoke_return*` traits. This will reduce the problems caused by `#define decltype(X) __typeof__(X)` in C++03.
Tests for this change have already been committed. All tests in `test/std/utilities/function.objects` now pass in C++03, previously there were 20 failures.
Reviewers: K-ballo, howard.hinnant, mclow.lists
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11553
llvm-svn: 246068
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llvm-svn: 224658
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