Louis Dionne 31cbe0f240 [libc++] Remove the c++98 Lit feature from the test suite
C++98 and C++03 are effectively aliases as far as Clang is concerned.
As such, allowing both std=c++98 and std=c++03 as Lit parameters is
just slightly confusing, but provides no value. It's similar to allowing
both std=c++17 and std=c++1z, which we don't do.

This was discovered because we had an internal bot that ran the test
suite under both c++98 AND c++03 -- one of which is redundant.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80926
2020-06-03 09:37:22 -04:00

43 lines
1.1 KiB
C++

//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// UNSUPPORTED: libcpp-has-no-threads
// UNSUPPORTED: c++03, c++11
// This test requires the dylib support introduced in D68480
// XFAIL: with_system_cxx_lib=macosx10.15
// XFAIL: with_system_cxx_lib=macosx10.14
// XFAIL: with_system_cxx_lib=macosx10.13
// XFAIL: with_system_cxx_lib=macosx10.12
// XFAIL: with_system_cxx_lib=macosx10.11
// XFAIL: with_system_cxx_lib=macosx10.10
// XFAIL: with_system_cxx_lib=macosx10.9
// <barrier>
#include <barrier>
#include <thread>
#include "test_macros.h"
int main(int, char**)
{
std::barrier<> b(2);
auto tok = b.arrive();
std::thread t([&](){
(void)b.arrive();
});
b.wait(std::move(tok));
t.join();
auto tok2 = b.arrive(2);
b.wait(std::move(tok2));
return 0;
}