`__apply_cv_t` and `__copy_cvref_t` are very closely related. They are
in fact identical except that `__copy_cvref_t` handles rvalue references
properly. Some uses don't actually require handling of references, so
they are replaced with `__copy_cv_t`.
This adds the local_info type and its formatting options.
The usage of the local_info object will be done in separate patches.
Implements parts of:
- P0355 Extending to Calendars and Time Zones
- P1361 Integration of chrono with text formatting
This patch removes the two-level backend dispatching mechanism we had in
the PSTL. Instead of selecting both a PSTL backend and a PSTL CPU
backend, we now only select a top-level PSTL backend. This greatly
simplifies the PSTL configuration layer.
While this patch technically removes some flexibility from the PSTL
configuration mechanism because CPU backends are not considered
separately, it opens the door to a much more powerful configuration
mechanism based on chained backends in a follow-up patch.
This is a step towards overhauling the PSTL dispatching mechanism.
In the future, this utility could be made to also work with iterators,
including bounded iterators. We could also query the ASAN runtime for
this information when it's around.
Currently, CPU backends in the PSTL are created by defining functions
in the __par_backend namespace. Then, the PSTL includes the CPU backend
that gets configured via CMake and gets those definitions.
This prevents CPU backends from easily co-existing and is a bit
confusing.
To solve this problem, this patch introduces the notion of __cpu_traits,
which is a cheap encapsulation of the basis operations required to
implement a CPU-based PSTL. Different backends can now define their own
tag and coexist, and the CPU-based PSTL will simply use __cpu_traits to
dispatch to the right implementation of e.g. __for_each.
Note that this patch doesn't change the actual implementation of the
backends in any way, it only modifies how that implementation is
accessed
to implement PSTL algorithms.
This patch is a step towards #88131.
This is a relatively low cost way of reducing the include sizes in older
language modes compared to the effect. For example, in C++14 mode the
include time of `<algorithm>` is reduced from 198ms to 127ms.
Adds the sys_info class and time_zone::get_info(). The code still has a
few quirks and has not been optimized for performance yet.
The returned sys_info is compared against the output of the zdump tool
in the test giving confidence the implementation is correct.
Implements parts of:
- P0355 Extending <chrono> to Calendars and Time Zones
Implements:
- LWGXXXX The sys_info range should be affected by save
This implements the loading of the leap-seconds.list file and store its
contents in the tzdb struct.
This adds the required `leap_seconds` member.
The class leap_seconds is fully implemented including its non-member
functions.
Implements parts of:
- P0355 Extending <chrono> to Calendars and Time Zones
- P1614 The Mothership has Landed
Implements:
- P1981 Rename leap to leap_second
- LWG3359 <chrono> leap second support should allow for negative leap
seconds
- LWG3383 §[time.zone.leap.nonmembers] sys_seconds should be replaced
with seconds
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.
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.
When some headers are not available because we removed features like
localization or threads, the compiler should not try to include these
headers when building modules. To avoid that from happening, add a
requires-declaration that is never satisfied when the configuration
in use doesn't support a header.
rdar://93777687
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127127
The functions to_chars and from_chars should offer 128-bit support. This
is the first step to implement 128-bit version of to_chars. Before
implementing 128-bit support the current code will be polished.
This moves the code from the dylib to the header in prepartion of
P2291 "Add Constexpr Modifiers to Functions to_chars and from_chars for
Integral Types in <charconv> Header"
Note some more cleanups will be done in follow-up commits
- Remove the _LIBCPP_AVAILABILITY_TO_CHARS from to_chars. With all code
in the header the availablilty macro is no longer needed. This
requires enabling the unit tests for additional platforms.
- The code in the dylib can switch to using the header implementation.
This allows removing the code duplicated in the header and the dylib.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125704
This commit ensures that we can include all libc++ headers with modules
enabled. It adds a test to ensure that this doesn't regress, which is
necessary because our modules CI job does not build in all Standard modes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125331
`<type_traits>` is quite a large header, so I'll granularize it in a few steps.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Spies: libcxx-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124755
This optimizes the __format_arg_store type to allow a more efficient
storage of the basic_format_args.
It stores the data in two arrays:
- A struct with the tag of the exposition only variant's type and the
offset of the element in the data array. Since this array only depends
on the type information it's calculated at compile time and can be
shared by different instances of this class.
- The arguments converted to the types used in the exposition only
variant of basic_format_arg. This means the packed data can be
directly copied to an element of this variant.
The new code uses rvalue reference arguments in preparation for P2418.
The handle class also has some changes to prepare for P2418. The real
changed for P2418 will be done separately, but these parts make it
easier to implement that paper.
Some parts of existing test code are removed since they were no longer
valid after the changes, but new tests have been added.
Implements parts of:
- P2418 Add support for std::generator-like types to std::format
Completes:
- LWG3473 Normative encouragement in non-normative note
Depends on D121138
Reviewed By: #libc, vitaut, Mordante
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121514
The concept is based on P2286R2 Formatting Ranges. It will be used to
optimise the storage of __format_arg_store as required by LWG-3473.
Depends on D120916
Reviewed By: #libc, Mordante
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120921
- add zip_view and views::zip for C++23
- added unit tests
- implemented section 5.6 (zip) in P2321R2
I used clang-format to format the files but they look nothing like the rest of the code base. Manually indenting each line to match the styles sounds like an impossible task. Is there any clang-format file which can format it reasonable similar to the rest of the code base so that I can manually format the rest lines that look weird?
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, philnik, var-const
Spies: Mordante, philnik, libcxx-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122806