MS UCRT seems confused on the status of LWG1327, and still provides
pre-LWG1327 overload set the related math functions, which can't handle
integer types as required. It is probably that UCRT won't fixed this in
a near future, per
https://developercommunity.visualstudio.com/t/10294165.
Before C++20, libc++ worked around this bug by relying on
`-fdelayed-template-parsing`. However, this non-conforming option is off
by default since C++20. I think we should use `requires` instead.
---------
Co-authored-by: Louis Dionne <ldionne.2@gmail.com>
Requirements on character-like types are updated unconditionally,
because `basic_string` does requires the default-constructibility. It
might be possible to make `basic_string_view` support classes with
non-public trivial default constructor, but this doesn't seem sensible.
libcxxabi's `ItaniumDemangle.h` is also updated to avoid deprecated
features.
We'e specialized `std::signbit` for signed and unsigned integral types
seperately, even though the optimizer can trivially figure out that
`unsigned_value < 0` always false is. This patch removes the
specialization, since there is really not much of a benefit to it.
These functions weren't added until API 26 (Android 8.0), but libc++ is
supported for API 21 and up.
These APIs are undeclared as of r.android.com/3216959.
This PR deprecates `<ccomplex>`, `<cstdbool>`, `<ctgmath>`, and
`<ciso646>` in C++17 and "removes" them in C++20 by special deprecation
warnings.
`<cstdalign>` is previously missing. This PR also tries to add them, and
then deprecates and "removes" `<cstdalign>`.
Papers:
- https://wg21.link/P0063R3
- https://wg21.link/P0619R4Closes#99985.
---------
Co-authored-by: Louis Dionne <ldionne.2@gmail.com>
This patch adds a large number of missing includes in the libc++ headers
and the test suite. Those were found as part of the effort to move
towards a mostly monolithic top-level std module.
After we switched to LLVM version 20, some libc++ tests started failing
on Windows. This patch adds the clang-20 condition to XFAIL to fix the
issue. The way that these tests are excluded from Windows are fragile
and need to be updated every time we bump the LLVM version.
This patch removes many annotations that are not relevant anymore since
we don't support or test back-deploying to macOS < 10.13. It also cleans
up raw usage of target triples to identify versions of dylibs shipped on
prior versions of macOS, and uses the target-agnostic Lit features
instead. Finally, it reorders both the Lit backdeployment features and
the corresponding availability macros in the library in a way that makes
more sense, and reformulates the Lit backdeployment features in terms of
when a version of LLVM was introduced instead of encoding the system
versions on which it hasn't been introduced yet. Although one can be
derived from the other, encoding the negative form is extremely
error-prone.
Fixes#80901
We were not making any distinction between e.g. the "Apple-flavored"
libc++ built from trunk and the system-provided standard library on
Apple platforms. For example, any test that would be XFAILed on a
back-deployment target would unexpectedly pass when run on that
deployment target against the tip of trunk Apple-flavored libc++. In
reality, that test would be expected to pass because we're running
against the latest libc++, even if it is Apple-flavored.
To solve this issue, we introduce a new feature that describes whether
the Standard Library in use is the one provided by the system by
default, and that notion is different from the underlying standard
library flavor. We also refactor the existing Lit features to make a
distinction between availability markup and the library we're running
against at runtime, which otherwise limit the flexibility of what we can
express in the test suite. Finally, we refactor some of the
back-deployment versions that were incorrect (such as thinking that LLVM
10 was introduced in macOS 11, when in reality macOS 11 was synced with
LLVM 11).
Fixes#82107
This is the last PR that's needed (for now) to get libc++'s tests
working with MSVC's STL.
The ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS machinery is very useful, but also very
problematic for MSVC, as it doesn't understand most of Clang's compiler
options. We've been dealing with this by simply marking anything that
uses ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS as FAIL or SKIPPED, but that creates
significant gaps in test coverage.
Fortunately, ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS also supports "features", which
can be slightly enhanced to send Clang-compatible and MSVC-compatible
options to the right compilers.
This patch adds the gcc-style-warnings and cl-style-warnings Lit features,
and uses that to pass the appropriate warning flags to tests. It also uses
TEST_MEOW_DIAGNOSTIC_IGNORED for a few local suppressions of MSVC
warnings.
The FE_* macros checked for in cfenv.pass.cpp are not required to be
defined, if the relevant options are _not_ available. Picolibc happens
not to provide these on some platforms.
Picolibc is a C Standard Library that is commonly used in embedded
environments. This patch adds initial support for this configuration
along with pre-commit CI. As of this patch, the test suite only builds
the tests and nothing is run. A follow-up patch will make the test suite
actually run the tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D154246
Instead of using individual macros to turn off missing C library
features, we use the using_if_exists attribute now. This patch removes
the _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_FGETPOS_FSETPOS macro used to workaround missing
fgetpos and fsetpos on older versions of Android -- using_if_exists
should take care of those in the headers and we should add appropriate
XFAILs to the tests instead of using TEST_HAS_NO_FGETPOS_FSETPOS.
Note libc++ implemented this in its initial version. It always used the type
from the C library and never validated whether it was an integer type.
Implements
- LWG3905 Type of std::fexcept_t
Reviewed By: #libc, philnik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D153285
These test cases were fixed with AIX 73TL1, and are currently passing on AIX machines with that fix. This fix has also been backported to the 7.2 service line. These were tested on a machine with AIX 7.2 TL 5 SP4 installed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148040
The use_system_cxx_lib Lit feature was only used for back-deployment
testing. However, one immense hole in that setup was that we didn't
have a proper way to test Apple's own libc++ outside of back-deployment,
which was embodied by the fact that we needed to define _LIBCPP_DISABLE_AVAILABILITY
when testing (see change in libcxx/utils/libcxx/test/params.py).
This led to the apple-system testing configuration not checking for
availability markup, which is obviously quite bad since the library
we ship actually has availability markup.
Using stdlib=<VENDOR>-libc++ instead to encode back-deployment restrictions
on tests is simpler and it makes it possible to naturally support tests
such as availability markup checking even in the tip-of-trunk Apple-libc++
configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146366
Whenever, possible, use ASSERT_SAME_TYPE instead of static_assert along
with std::is_same in the depr header tests. This prevents dragging in
multiple headers unrelated to the header being tested, which can (and
has) hidden issues.
Also, add a couple of tests to ensure that basic declarations in
<stddef.h> and <stdint.h> are available when including just those
headers, since the rest of the tests for those types require pulling
in additional dependencies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145116
First, fix a collision with the Point type from MacTypes.h, which was
reported on Slack, 2022-07-31: https://cpplang.slack.com/archives/C2X659D1B/p1659284691275889
Second, rename the meta:: namespace to types::. OSX's "/usr/include/ncurses.h"
defines a `meta` function, and is (for some reason) included in
"<SDK>/usr/include/module.modulemap", so that identifier is off-limits
for us to use in anything that compiles with -fmodules:
libcxx/test/support/type_algorithms.h:16:11: error: redefinition of 'meta' as different kind of symbol
namespace meta {
^
<SDK>/usr/include/ncurses.h:603:28: note: previous definition is here
extern NCURSES_EXPORT(int) meta (WINDOW *,bool); /* implemented */
^
Finally, add a CI configuration for modules on OS X to make sure it
does not regress.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D144915
When we define the const-correct overloads of <string.h> functions in
libc++ itself, use builtins whenever possible. This avoids depending on
the presence of these functions in the C library headers.
Also, as a fly-by, improve the tests for these functions since we
basically didn't check anything but their signature. We could have
used the wrong builtin (as long as the signature matched) without ever
noticing, which was quite scary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D138684
Mark tests XFAIL that use APIs that are unsupported on old versions of
Android:
- aligned_alloc isn't available until API 28.
- timespec_get isn't available until API 29.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137134
This change implements the C library dependent portions of P0482R6
(char8_t: A type for UTF-8 characters and strings (Revision 6)) by
declaring std::c8rtomb() and std::mbrtoc8() in the <cuchar> header
when implementations are provided by the C library as specified by
WG14 N2653 (char8_t: A type for UTF-8 characters and strings
(Revision 1)) as adopted for C23.
A _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_C8RTOMB_MBRTOC8 macro is defined by the libc++ __config
header unless it is known that the C library provides these functions
in the current compilation mode. This macro is used for testing purposes
and may be of use to libc++ users. At present, the only C library known
to implement these functions is GNU libc as of its 2.36 release.
Reviewed By: ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130946
Since those features are general properties of the environment, it makes
sense to use them from libc++abi too, and so the name libcpp-has-no-xxx
doesn't make sense.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126482
AIX's system header provides these C++ overloads for compatibility with
older XL C++ implementations, but they can be disabled by defining
__LIBC_NO_CPP_MATH_OVERLOADS__ since AIX 7.2 TL 5 SP 3.
Since D109078 landed clang will define this macro when using libc++ on
AIX and we already run the lit tests with it too. This change will
enable the overloads in libc++'s math.h and we'll continue to require
the compiler to define the macro going forward.
Reviewed By: ldionne, jsji, EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102172
co-authored-by: Jason Liu <jasonliu.development@gmail.com>
This changes adds the pipeline config for both 32-bit and 64-bit AIX targets. As well, we add a lit feature `LIBCXX-AIX-FIXME` which is used to mark the failing tests which remain to be investigated on AIX, so that the CI produces a clean build.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111359
Those tests would pass when run on a C Standard Library that actually
provides wide characters, but fail when run on top of one that doesn't.
It's really difficult to test this 100% perfectly in the CI without
introducing an actual platform that doesn't provide these declarations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112937
This allows picking up on mingw triples that often use 'w64' instead
of 'pc' as the vendor part.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111297
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
Even if these comments have a benefit in .h files (for editors that
care about language but can't be configured to treat .h as C++ code),
they certainly have no benefit for files with the .cpp extension.
Discussed in D110794.
Based on https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc, it appears that the CloudABI
project has been abandoned. This patch removes a bunch of CloudABI specific
logic that had been added to support that platform.
Note that some knobs like LIBCXX_ENABLE_STDIN and LIBCXX_ENABLE_STDOUT
coud be useful in their own right, however those are currently broken.
If we want to re-add such knobs in the future, we can do it like we've
done it for localization & friends so that we can officially support
that configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108637
This allows testing the rest of those headers on most platforms, instead
of XFAILing the whole test just because of a few functions.
As a fly-by fix, remove std/utilities/time/date.time/ctime.pass.cpp,
which was a duplicate of std/language.support/support.runtime/ctime.pass.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108295
Instead of trying to sniff out what features are supported by the
library being tested, the way we normally handle these things is with
Lit annotations. This should not be treated differently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108209
This was added inconsistently in
19fd9039ca242f408493b5c662f9d908eab8555e; Windows doesn't have the
aligned_alloc function (neither MSVC nor MinGW toolchains) and we don't
define _LIBCPP_HAS_ALIGNED_ALLOC while building libcxx.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103399
In 5fd17ab, we worked around the Apple system headers not providing
const-correct overloads for some <string.h> functions. However, that
required an attribute that was only present in recent Clangs at the
time. We can now assume that all supported Clang versions on Apple
platforms do support that attribute.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100477
This makes no attempt yet to look into the why/what for each of them,
but makes the CI configuration useful for tracking further regressions.
After looking into each case, they can either be fixed, or converted
into UNSUPPORTED: windows or XFAIL: windows, once the cause is known
and explained.
A number of the filesystem cases can be fixed by patches that are
currently in review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99095
- Several -Wshadow warnings
- Several places where we did not initialize our base class explicitly
- Unused variable warnings
- Some tautological comparisons
- Some places where we'd pass null arguments to functions expecting
non-null (in unevaluated contexts)
- Add a few pragmas to turn off spurious warnings
- Fix warnings about declarations that don't declare anything
- Properly disable deprecation warnings in ext/ tests (the pragmas we
were using didn't work on GCC)
- Disable include_as_c.sh.cpp because GCC complains about C++ flags
when compiling as C. I couldn't find a way to fix this one properly,
so I'm disabling the test. This isn't great, but at least we'll be
able to enable warnings in the whole test suite with GCC.