| ========================= |
| Clang Language Extensions |
| ========================= |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
| :depth: 1 |
| |
| .. toctree:: |
| :hidden: |
| |
| ObjectiveCLiterals |
| BlockLanguageSpec |
| Block-ABI-Apple |
| AutomaticReferenceCounting |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| This document describes the language extensions provided by Clang. In addition |
| to the language extensions listed here, Clang aims to support a broad range of |
| GCC extensions. Please see the `GCC manual |
| <http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/C-Extensions.html>`_ for more information on |
| these extensions. |
| |
| .. _langext-feature_check: |
| |
| Feature Checking Macros |
| ======================= |
| |
| Language extensions can be very useful, but only if you know you can depend on |
| them. In order to allow fine-grain features checks, we support three builtin |
| function-like macros. This allows you to directly test for a feature in your |
| code without having to resort to something like autoconf or fragile "compiler |
| version checks". |
| |
| ``__has_builtin`` |
| ----------------- |
| |
| This function-like macro takes a single identifier argument that is the name of |
| a builtin function. It evaluates to 1 if the builtin is supported or 0 if not. |
| It can be used like this: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #ifndef __has_builtin // Optional of course. |
| #define __has_builtin(x) 0 // Compatibility with non-clang compilers. |
| #endif |
| |
| ... |
| #if __has_builtin(__builtin_trap) |
| __builtin_trap(); |
| #else |
| abort(); |
| #endif |
| ... |
| |
| .. _langext-__has_feature-__has_extension: |
| |
| ``__has_feature`` and ``__has_extension`` |
| ----------------------------------------- |
| |
| These function-like macros take a single identifier argument that is the name |
| of a feature. ``__has_feature`` evaluates to 1 if the feature is both |
| supported by Clang and standardized in the current language standard or 0 if |
| not (but see :ref:`below <langext-has-feature-back-compat>`), while |
| ``__has_extension`` evaluates to 1 if the feature is supported by Clang in the |
| current language (either as a language extension or a standard language |
| feature) or 0 if not. They can be used like this: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #ifndef __has_feature // Optional of course. |
| #define __has_feature(x) 0 // Compatibility with non-clang compilers. |
| #endif |
| #ifndef __has_extension |
| #define __has_extension __has_feature // Compatibility with pre-3.0 compilers. |
| #endif |
| |
| ... |
| #if __has_feature(cxx_rvalue_references) |
| // This code will only be compiled with the -std=c++11 and -std=gnu++11 |
| // options, because rvalue references are only standardized in C++11. |
| #endif |
| |
| #if __has_extension(cxx_rvalue_references) |
| // This code will be compiled with the -std=c++11, -std=gnu++11, -std=c++98 |
| // and -std=gnu++98 options, because rvalue references are supported as a |
| // language extension in C++98. |
| #endif |
| |
| .. _langext-has-feature-back-compat: |
| |
| For backwards compatibility reasons, ``__has_feature`` can also be used to test |
| for support for non-standardized features, i.e. features not prefixed ``c_``, |
| ``cxx_`` or ``objc_``. |
| |
| Another use of ``__has_feature`` is to check for compiler features not related |
| to the language standard, such as e.g. :doc:`AddressSanitizer |
| <AddressSanitizer>`. |
| |
| If the ``-pedantic-errors`` option is given, ``__has_extension`` is equivalent |
| to ``__has_feature``. |
| |
| The feature tag is described along with the language feature below. |
| |
| The feature name or extension name can also be specified with a preceding and |
| following ``__`` (double underscore) to avoid interference from a macro with |
| the same name. For instance, ``__cxx_rvalue_references__`` can be used instead |
| of ``cxx_rvalue_references``. |
| |
| ``__has_attribute`` |
| ------------------- |
| |
| This function-like macro takes a single identifier argument that is the name of |
| an attribute. It evaluates to 1 if the attribute is supported or 0 if not. It |
| can be used like this: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #ifndef __has_attribute // Optional of course. |
| #define __has_attribute(x) 0 // Compatibility with non-clang compilers. |
| #endif |
| |
| ... |
| #if __has_attribute(always_inline) |
| #define ALWAYS_INLINE __attribute__((always_inline)) |
| #else |
| #define ALWAYS_INLINE |
| #endif |
| ... |
| |
| The attribute name can also be specified with a preceding and following ``__`` |
| (double underscore) to avoid interference from a macro with the same name. For |
| instance, ``__always_inline__`` can be used instead of ``always_inline``. |
| |
| Include File Checking Macros |
| ============================ |
| |
| Not all developments systems have the same include files. The |
| :ref:`langext-__has_include` and :ref:`langext-__has_include_next` macros allow |
| you to check for the existence of an include file before doing a possibly |
| failing ``#include`` directive. Include file checking macros must be used |
| as expressions in ``#if`` or ``#elif`` preprocessing directives. |
| |
| .. _langext-__has_include: |
| |
| ``__has_include`` |
| ----------------- |
| |
| This function-like macro takes a single file name string argument that is the |
| name of an include file. It evaluates to 1 if the file can be found using the |
| include paths, or 0 otherwise: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| // Note the two possible file name string formats. |
| #if __has_include("myinclude.h") && __has_include(<stdint.h>) |
| # include "myinclude.h" |
| #endif |
| |
| // To avoid problem with non-clang compilers not having this macro. |
| #if defined(__has_include) && __has_include("myinclude.h") |
| # include "myinclude.h" |
| #endif |
| |
| To test for this feature, use ``#if defined(__has_include)``. |
| |
| .. _langext-__has_include_next: |
| |
| ``__has_include_next`` |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| This function-like macro takes a single file name string argument that is the |
| name of an include file. It is like ``__has_include`` except that it looks for |
| the second instance of the given file found in the include paths. It evaluates |
| to 1 if the second instance of the file can be found using the include paths, |
| or 0 otherwise: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| // Note the two possible file name string formats. |
| #if __has_include_next("myinclude.h") && __has_include_next(<stdint.h>) |
| # include_next "myinclude.h" |
| #endif |
| |
| // To avoid problem with non-clang compilers not having this macro. |
| #if defined(__has_include_next) && __has_include_next("myinclude.h") |
| # include_next "myinclude.h" |
| #endif |
| |
| Note that ``__has_include_next``, like the GNU extension ``#include_next`` |
| directive, is intended for use in headers only, and will issue a warning if |
| used in the top-level compilation file. A warning will also be issued if an |
| absolute path is used in the file argument. |
| |
| ``__has_warning`` |
| ----------------- |
| |
| This function-like macro takes a string literal that represents a command line |
| option for a warning and returns true if that is a valid warning option. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #if __has_warning("-Wformat") |
| ... |
| #endif |
| |
| Builtin Macros |
| ============== |
| |
| ``__BASE_FILE__`` |
| Defined to a string that contains the name of the main input file passed to |
| Clang. |
| |
| ``__COUNTER__`` |
| Defined to an integer value that starts at zero and is incremented each time |
| the ``__COUNTER__`` macro is expanded. |
| |
| ``__INCLUDE_LEVEL__`` |
| Defined to an integral value that is the include depth of the file currently |
| being translated. For the main file, this value is zero. |
| |
| ``__TIMESTAMP__`` |
| Defined to the date and time of the last modification of the current source |
| file. |
| |
| ``__clang__`` |
| Defined when compiling with Clang |
| |
| ``__clang_major__`` |
| Defined to the major marketing version number of Clang (e.g., the 2 in |
| 2.0.1). Note that marketing version numbers should not be used to check for |
| language features, as different vendors use different numbering schemes. |
| Instead, use the :ref:`langext-feature_check`. |
| |
| ``__clang_minor__`` |
| Defined to the minor version number of Clang (e.g., the 0 in 2.0.1). Note |
| that marketing version numbers should not be used to check for language |
| features, as different vendors use different numbering schemes. Instead, use |
| the :ref:`langext-feature_check`. |
| |
| ``__clang_patchlevel__`` |
| Defined to the marketing patch level of Clang (e.g., the 1 in 2.0.1). |
| |
| ``__clang_version__`` |
| Defined to a string that captures the Clang marketing version, including the |
| Subversion tag or revision number, e.g., "``1.5 (trunk 102332)``". |
| |
| .. _langext-vectors: |
| |
| Vectors and Extended Vectors |
| ============================ |
| |
| Supports the GCC, OpenCL, AltiVec and NEON vector extensions. |
| |
| OpenCL vector types are created using ``ext_vector_type`` attribute. It |
| support for ``V.xyzw`` syntax and other tidbits as seen in OpenCL. An example |
| is: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| typedef float float4 __attribute__((ext_vector_type(4))); |
| typedef float float2 __attribute__((ext_vector_type(2))); |
| |
| float4 foo(float2 a, float2 b) { |
| float4 c; |
| c.xz = a; |
| c.yw = b; |
| return c; |
| } |
| |
| Query for this feature with ``__has_extension(attribute_ext_vector_type)``. |
| |
| Giving ``-faltivec`` option to clang enables support for AltiVec vector syntax |
| and functions. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| vector float foo(vector int a) { |
| vector int b; |
| b = vec_add(a, a) + a; |
| return (vector float)b; |
| } |
| |
| NEON vector types are created using ``neon_vector_type`` and |
| ``neon_polyvector_type`` attributes. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| typedef __attribute__((neon_vector_type(8))) int8_t int8x8_t; |
| typedef __attribute__((neon_polyvector_type(16))) poly8_t poly8x16_t; |
| |
| int8x8_t foo(int8x8_t a) { |
| int8x8_t v; |
| v = a; |
| return v; |
| } |
| |
| Vector Literals |
| --------------- |
| |
| Vector literals can be used to create vectors from a set of scalars, or |
| vectors. Either parentheses or braces form can be used. In the parentheses |
| form the number of literal values specified must be one, i.e. referring to a |
| scalar value, or must match the size of the vector type being created. If a |
| single scalar literal value is specified, the scalar literal value will be |
| replicated to all the components of the vector type. In the brackets form any |
| number of literals can be specified. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| typedef int v4si __attribute__((__vector_size__(16))); |
| typedef float float4 __attribute__((ext_vector_type(4))); |
| typedef float float2 __attribute__((ext_vector_type(2))); |
| |
| v4si vsi = (v4si){1, 2, 3, 4}; |
| float4 vf = (float4)(1.0f, 2.0f, 3.0f, 4.0f); |
| vector int vi1 = (vector int)(1); // vi1 will be (1, 1, 1, 1). |
| vector int vi2 = (vector int){1}; // vi2 will be (1, 0, 0, 0). |
| vector int vi3 = (vector int)(1, 2); // error |
| vector int vi4 = (vector int){1, 2}; // vi4 will be (1, 2, 0, 0). |
| vector int vi5 = (vector int)(1, 2, 3, 4); |
| float4 vf = (float4)((float2)(1.0f, 2.0f), (float2)(3.0f, 4.0f)); |
| |
| Vector Operations |
| ----------------- |
| |
| The table below shows the support for each operation by vector extension. A |
| dash indicates that an operation is not accepted according to a corresponding |
| specification. |
| |
| ============================== ====== ======= === ==== |
| Opeator OpenCL AltiVec GCC NEON |
| ============================== ====== ======= === ==== |
| [] yes yes yes -- |
| unary operators +, -- yes yes yes -- |
| ++, -- -- yes yes yes -- |
| +,--,*,/,% yes yes yes -- |
| bitwise operators &,|,^,~ yes yes yes -- |
| >>,<< yes yes yes -- |
| !, &&, || no -- -- -- |
| ==, !=, >, <, >=, <= yes yes -- -- |
| = yes yes yes yes |
| :? yes -- -- -- |
| sizeof yes yes yes yes |
| ============================== ====== ======= === ==== |
| |
| See also :ref:`langext-__builtin_shufflevector`. |
| |
| Messages on ``deprecated`` and ``unavailable`` Attributes |
| ========================================================= |
| |
| An optional string message can be added to the ``deprecated`` and |
| ``unavailable`` attributes. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| void explode(void) __attribute__((deprecated("extremely unsafe, use 'combust' instead!!!"))); |
| |
| If the deprecated or unavailable declaration is used, the message will be |
| incorporated into the appropriate diagnostic: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| harmless.c:4:3: warning: 'explode' is deprecated: extremely unsafe, use 'combust' instead!!! |
| [-Wdeprecated-declarations] |
| explode(); |
| ^ |
| |
| Query for this feature with |
| ``__has_extension(attribute_deprecated_with_message)`` and |
| ``__has_extension(attribute_unavailable_with_message)``. |
| |
| Attributes on Enumerators |
| ========================= |
| |
| Clang allows attributes to be written on individual enumerators. This allows |
| enumerators to be deprecated, made unavailable, etc. The attribute must appear |
| after the enumerator name and before any initializer, like so: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| enum OperationMode { |
| OM_Invalid, |
| OM_Normal, |
| OM_Terrified __attribute__((deprecated)), |
| OM_AbortOnError __attribute__((deprecated)) = 4 |
| }; |
| |
| Attributes on the ``enum`` declaration do not apply to individual enumerators. |
| |
| Query for this feature with ``__has_extension(enumerator_attributes)``. |
| |
| 'User-Specified' System Frameworks |
| ================================== |
| |
| Clang provides a mechanism by which frameworks can be built in such a way that |
| they will always be treated as being "system frameworks", even if they are not |
| present in a system framework directory. This can be useful to system |
| framework developers who want to be able to test building other applications |
| with development builds of their framework, including the manner in which the |
| compiler changes warning behavior for system headers. |
| |
| Framework developers can opt-in to this mechanism by creating a |
| "``.system_framework``" file at the top-level of their framework. That is, the |
| framework should have contents like: |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| .../TestFramework.framework |
| .../TestFramework.framework/.system_framework |
| .../TestFramework.framework/Headers |
| .../TestFramework.framework/Headers/TestFramework.h |
| ... |
| |
| Clang will treat the presence of this file as an indicator that the framework |
| should be treated as a system framework, regardless of how it was found in the |
| framework search path. For consistency, we recommend that such files never be |
| included in installed versions of the framework. |
| |
| Availability attribute |
| ====================== |
| |
| Clang introduces the ``availability`` attribute, which can be placed on |
| declarations to describe the lifecycle of that declaration relative to |
| operating system versions. Consider the function declaration for a |
| hypothetical function ``f``: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| void f(void) __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.4,deprecated=10.6,obsoleted=10.7))); |
| |
| The availability attribute states that ``f`` was introduced in Mac OS X 10.4, |
| deprecated in Mac OS X 10.6, and obsoleted in Mac OS X 10.7. This information |
| is used by Clang to determine when it is safe to use ``f``: for example, if |
| Clang is instructed to compile code for Mac OS X 10.5, a call to ``f()`` |
| succeeds. If Clang is instructed to compile code for Mac OS X 10.6, the call |
| succeeds but Clang emits a warning specifying that the function is deprecated. |
| Finally, if Clang is instructed to compile code for Mac OS X 10.7, the call |
| fails because ``f()`` is no longer available. |
| |
| The availability attribute is a comma-separated list starting with the |
| platform name and then including clauses specifying important milestones in the |
| declaration's lifetime (in any order) along with additional information. Those |
| clauses can be: |
| |
| introduced=\ *version* |
| The first version in which this declaration was introduced. |
| |
| deprecated=\ *version* |
| The first version in which this declaration was deprecated, meaning that |
| users should migrate away from this API. |
| |
| obsoleted=\ *version* |
| The first version in which this declaration was obsoleted, meaning that it |
| was removed completely and can no longer be used. |
| |
| unavailable |
| This declaration is never available on this platform. |
| |
| message=\ *string-literal* |
| Additional message text that Clang will provide when emitting a warning or |
| error about use of a deprecated or obsoleted declaration. Useful to direct |
| users to replacement APIs. |
| |
| Multiple availability attributes can be placed on a declaration, which may |
| correspond to different platforms. Only the availability attribute with the |
| platform corresponding to the target platform will be used; any others will be |
| ignored. If no availability attribute specifies availability for the current |
| target platform, the availability attributes are ignored. Supported platforms |
| are: |
| |
| ``ios`` |
| Apple's iOS operating system. The minimum deployment target is specified by |
| the ``-mios-version-min=*version*`` or ``-miphoneos-version-min=*version*`` |
| command-line arguments. |
| |
| ``macosx`` |
| Apple's Mac OS X operating system. The minimum deployment target is |
| specified by the ``-mmacosx-version-min=*version*`` command-line argument. |
| |
| A declaration can be used even when deploying back to a platform version prior |
| to when the declaration was introduced. When this happens, the declaration is |
| `weakly linked |
| <https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/MacOSX/Conceptual/BPFrameworks/Concepts/WeakLinking.html>`_, |
| as if the ``weak_import`` attribute were added to the declaration. A |
| weakly-linked declaration may or may not be present a run-time, and a program |
| can determine whether the declaration is present by checking whether the |
| address of that declaration is non-NULL. |
| |
| If there are multiple declarations of the same entity, the availability |
| attributes must either match on a per-platform basis or later |
| declarations must not have availability attributes for that |
| platform. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void g(void) __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.4))); |
| void g(void) __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.4))); // okay, matches |
| void g(void) __attribute__((availability(ios,introduced=4.0))); // okay, adds a new platform |
| void g(void); // okay, inherits both macosx and ios availability from above. |
| void g(void) __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.5))); // error: mismatch |
| |
| When one method overrides another, the overriding method can be more widely available than the overridden method, e.g.,: |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| @interface A |
| - (id)method __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.4))); |
| - (id)method2 __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.4))); |
| @end |
| |
| @interface B : A |
| - (id)method __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.3))); // okay: method moved into base class later |
| - (id)method __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.5))); // error: this method was available via the base class in 10.4 |
| @end |
| |
| Checks for Standard Language Features |
| ===================================== |
| |
| The ``__has_feature`` macro can be used to query if certain standard language |
| features are enabled. The ``__has_extension`` macro can be used to query if |
| language features are available as an extension when compiling for a standard |
| which does not provide them. The features which can be tested are listed here. |
| |
| C++98 |
| ----- |
| |
| The features listed below are part of the C++98 standard. These features are |
| enabled by default when compiling C++ code. |
| |
| C++ exceptions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_exceptions)`` to determine if C++ exceptions have been |
| enabled. For example, compiling code with ``-fno-exceptions`` disables C++ |
| exceptions. |
| |
| C++ RTTI |
| ^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_rtti)`` to determine if C++ RTTI has been enabled. For |
| example, compiling code with ``-fno-rtti`` disables the use of RTTI. |
| |
| C++11 |
| ----- |
| |
| The features listed below are part of the C++11 standard. As a result, all |
| these features are enabled with the ``-std=c++11`` or ``-std=gnu++11`` option |
| when compiling C++ code. |
| |
| C++11 SFINAE includes access control |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_access_control_sfinae)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_access_control_sfinae)`` to determine whether |
| access-control errors (e.g., calling a private constructor) are considered to |
| be template argument deduction errors (aka SFINAE errors), per `C++ DR1170 |
| <http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#1170>`_. |
| |
| C++11 alias templates |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_alias_templates)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_alias_templates)`` to determine if support for C++11's |
| alias declarations and alias templates is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 alignment specifiers |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_alignas)`` or ``__has_extension(cxx_alignas)`` to |
| determine if support for alignment specifiers using ``alignas`` is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 attributes |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_attributes)`` or ``__has_extension(cxx_attributes)`` to |
| determine if support for attribute parsing with C++11's square bracket notation |
| is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 generalized constant expressions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_constexpr)`` to determine if support for generalized |
| constant expressions (e.g., ``constexpr``) is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 ``decltype()`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_decltype)`` or ``__has_extension(cxx_decltype)`` to |
| determine if support for the ``decltype()`` specifier is enabled. C++11's |
| ``decltype`` does not require type-completeness of a function call expression. |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_decltype_incomplete_return_types)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_decltype_incomplete_return_types)`` to determine if |
| support for this feature is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 default template arguments in function templates |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_default_function_template_args)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_default_function_template_args)`` to determine if support |
| for default template arguments in function templates is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 ``default``\ ed functions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_defaulted_functions)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_defaulted_functions)`` to determine if support for |
| defaulted function definitions (with ``= default``) is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 delegating constructors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_delegating_constructors)`` to determine if support for |
| delegating constructors is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 ``deleted`` functions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_deleted_functions)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_deleted_functions)`` to determine if support for deleted |
| function definitions (with ``= delete``) is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 explicit conversion functions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_explicit_conversions)`` to determine if support for |
| ``explicit`` conversion functions is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 generalized initializers |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_generalized_initializers)`` to determine if support for |
| generalized initializers (using braced lists and ``std::initializer_list``) is |
| enabled. |
| |
| C++11 implicit move constructors/assignment operators |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_implicit_moves)`` to determine if Clang will implicitly |
| generate move constructors and move assignment operators where needed. |
| |
| C++11 inheriting constructors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_inheriting_constructors)`` to determine if support for |
| inheriting constructors is enabled. Clang does not currently implement this |
| feature. |
| |
| C++11 inline namespaces |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_inline_namespaces)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_inline_namespaces)`` to determine if support for inline |
| namespaces is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 lambdas |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_lambdas)`` or ``__has_extension(cxx_lambdas)`` to |
| determine if support for lambdas is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 local and unnamed types as template arguments |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_local_type_template_args)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_local_type_template_args)`` to determine if support for |
| local and unnamed types as template arguments is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 noexcept |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_noexcept)`` or ``__has_extension(cxx_noexcept)`` to |
| determine if support for noexcept exception specifications is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 in-class non-static data member initialization |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_nonstatic_member_init)`` to determine whether in-class |
| initialization of non-static data members is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 ``nullptr`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_nullptr)`` or ``__has_extension(cxx_nullptr)`` to |
| determine if support for ``nullptr`` is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 ``override control`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_override_control)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_override_control)`` to determine if support for the |
| override control keywords is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 reference-qualified functions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_reference_qualified_functions)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_reference_qualified_functions)`` to determine if support |
| for reference-qualified functions (e.g., member functions with ``&`` or ``&&`` |
| applied to ``*this``) is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 range-based ``for`` loop |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_range_for)`` or ``__has_extension(cxx_range_for)`` to |
| determine if support for the range-based for loop is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 raw string literals |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_raw_string_literals)`` to determine if support for raw |
| string literals (e.g., ``R"x(foo\bar)x"``) is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 rvalue references |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_rvalue_references)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_rvalue_references)`` to determine if support for rvalue |
| references is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 ``static_assert()`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_static_assert)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_static_assert)`` to determine if support for compile-time |
| assertions using ``static_assert`` is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 type inference |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_auto_type)`` or ``__has_extension(cxx_auto_type)`` to |
| determine C++11 type inference is supported using the ``auto`` specifier. If |
| this is disabled, ``auto`` will instead be a storage class specifier, as in C |
| or C++98. |
| |
| C++11 strongly typed enumerations |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_strong_enums)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_strong_enums)`` to determine if support for strongly |
| typed, scoped enumerations is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 trailing return type |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_trailing_return)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_trailing_return)`` to determine if support for the |
| alternate function declaration syntax with trailing return type is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 Unicode string literals |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_unicode_literals)`` to determine if support for Unicode |
| string literals is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 unrestricted unions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_unrestricted_unions)`` to determine if support for |
| unrestricted unions is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 user-defined literals |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_user_literals)`` to determine if support for |
| user-defined literals is enabled. |
| |
| C++11 variadic templates |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(cxx_variadic_templates)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(cxx_variadic_templates)`` to determine if support for |
| variadic templates is enabled. |
| |
| C11 |
| --- |
| |
| The features listed below are part of the C11 standard. As a result, all these |
| features are enabled with the ``-std=c11`` or ``-std=gnu11`` option when |
| compiling C code. Additionally, because these features are all |
| backward-compatible, they are available as extensions in all language modes. |
| |
| C11 alignment specifiers |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(c_alignas)`` or ``__has_extension(c_alignas)`` to determine |
| if support for alignment specifiers using ``_Alignas`` is enabled. |
| |
| C11 atomic operations |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(c_atomic)`` or ``__has_extension(c_atomic)`` to determine |
| if support for atomic types using ``_Atomic`` is enabled. Clang also provides |
| :ref:`a set of builtins <langext-__c11_atomic>` which can be used to implement |
| the ``<stdatomic.h>`` operations on ``_Atomic`` types. |
| |
| C11 generic selections |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(c_generic_selections)`` or |
| ``__has_extension(c_generic_selections)`` to determine if support for generic |
| selections is enabled. |
| |
| As an extension, the C11 generic selection expression is available in all |
| languages supported by Clang. The syntax is the same as that given in the C11 |
| standard. |
| |
| In C, type compatibility is decided according to the rules given in the |
| appropriate standard, but in C++, which lacks the type compatibility rules used |
| in C, types are considered compatible only if they are equivalent. |
| |
| C11 ``_Static_assert()`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(c_static_assert)`` or ``__has_extension(c_static_assert)`` |
| to determine if support for compile-time assertions using ``_Static_assert`` is |
| enabled. |
| |
| Checks for Type Traits |
| ====================== |
| |
| Clang supports the `GNU C++ type traits |
| <http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Type-Traits.html>`_ and a subset of the |
| `Microsoft Visual C++ Type traits |
| <http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms177194(v=VS.100).aspx>`_. For each |
| supported type trait ``__X``, ``__has_extension(X)`` indicates the presence of |
| the type trait. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #if __has_extension(is_convertible_to) |
| template<typename From, typename To> |
| struct is_convertible_to { |
| static const bool value = __is_convertible_to(From, To); |
| }; |
| #else |
| // Emulate type trait |
| #endif |
| |
| The following type traits are supported by Clang: |
| |
| * ``__has_nothrow_assign`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__has_nothrow_copy`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__has_nothrow_constructor`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__has_trivial_assign`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__has_trivial_copy`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__has_trivial_constructor`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__has_trivial_destructor`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__has_virtual_destructor`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_abstract`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_base_of`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_class`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_convertible_to`` (Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_empty`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_enum`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_interface_class`` (Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_pod`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_polymorphic`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_union`` (GNU, Microsoft) |
| * ``__is_literal(type)``: Determines whether the given type is a literal type |
| * ``__is_final``: Determines whether the given type is declared with a |
| ``final`` class-virt-specifier. |
| * ``__underlying_type(type)``: Retrieves the underlying type for a given |
| ``enum`` type. This trait is required to implement the C++11 standard |
| library. |
| * ``__is_trivially_assignable(totype, fromtype)``: Determines whether a value |
| of type ``totype`` can be assigned to from a value of type ``fromtype`` such |
| that no non-trivial functions are called as part of that assignment. This |
| trait is required to implement the C++11 standard library. |
| * ``__is_trivially_constructible(type, argtypes...)``: Determines whether a |
| value of type ``type`` can be direct-initialized with arguments of types |
| ``argtypes...`` such that no non-trivial functions are called as part of |
| that initialization. This trait is required to implement the C++11 standard |
| library. |
| |
| Blocks |
| ====== |
| |
| The syntax and high level language feature description is in |
| :doc:`BlockLanguageSpec<BlockLanguageSpec>`. Implementation and ABI details for |
| the clang implementation are in :doc:`Block-ABI-Apple<Block-ABI-Apple>`. |
| |
| Query for this feature with ``__has_extension(blocks)``. |
| |
| Objective-C Features |
| ==================== |
| |
| Related result types |
| -------------------- |
| |
| According to Cocoa conventions, Objective-C methods with certain names |
| ("``init``", "``alloc``", etc.) always return objects that are an instance of |
| the receiving class's type. Such methods are said to have a "related result |
| type", meaning that a message send to one of these methods will have the same |
| static type as an instance of the receiver class. For example, given the |
| following classes: |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| @interface NSObject |
| + (id)alloc; |
| - (id)init; |
| @end |
| |
| @interface NSArray : NSObject |
| @end |
| |
| and this common initialization pattern |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| NSArray *array = [[NSArray alloc] init]; |
| |
| the type of the expression ``[NSArray alloc]`` is ``NSArray*`` because |
| ``alloc`` implicitly has a related result type. Similarly, the type of the |
| expression ``[[NSArray alloc] init]`` is ``NSArray*``, since ``init`` has a |
| related result type and its receiver is known to have the type ``NSArray *``. |
| If neither ``alloc`` nor ``init`` had a related result type, the expressions |
| would have had type ``id``, as declared in the method signature. |
| |
| A method with a related result type can be declared by using the type |
| ``instancetype`` as its result type. ``instancetype`` is a contextual keyword |
| that is only permitted in the result type of an Objective-C method, e.g. |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| @interface A |
| + (instancetype)constructAnA; |
| @end |
| |
| The related result type can also be inferred for some methods. To determine |
| whether a method has an inferred related result type, the first word in the |
| camel-case selector (e.g., "``init``" in "``initWithObjects``") is considered, |
| and the method will have a related result type if its return type is compatible |
| with the type of its class and if: |
| |
| * the first word is "``alloc``" or "``new``", and the method is a class method, |
| or |
| |
| * the first word is "``autorelease``", "``init``", "``retain``", or "``self``", |
| and the method is an instance method. |
| |
| If a method with a related result type is overridden by a subclass method, the |
| subclass method must also return a type that is compatible with the subclass |
| type. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| @interface NSString : NSObject |
| - (NSUnrelated *)init; // incorrect usage: NSUnrelated is not NSString or a superclass of NSString |
| @end |
| |
| Related result types only affect the type of a message send or property access |
| via the given method. In all other respects, a method with a related result |
| type is treated the same way as method that returns ``id``. |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(objc_instancetype)`` to determine whether the |
| ``instancetype`` contextual keyword is available. |
| |
| Automatic reference counting |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| Clang provides support for :doc:`automated reference counting |
| <AutomaticReferenceCounting>` in Objective-C, which eliminates the need |
| for manual ``retain``/``release``/``autorelease`` message sends. There are two |
| feature macros associated with automatic reference counting: |
| ``__has_feature(objc_arc)`` indicates the availability of automated reference |
| counting in general, while ``__has_feature(objc_arc_weak)`` indicates that |
| automated reference counting also includes support for ``__weak`` pointers to |
| Objective-C objects. |
| |
| .. _objc-fixed-enum: |
| |
| Enumerations with a fixed underlying type |
| ----------------------------------------- |
| |
| Clang provides support for C++11 enumerations with a fixed underlying type |
| within Objective-C. For example, one can write an enumeration type as: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| typedef enum : unsigned char { Red, Green, Blue } Color; |
| |
| This specifies that the underlying type, which is used to store the enumeration |
| value, is ``unsigned char``. |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(objc_fixed_enum)`` to determine whether support for fixed |
| underlying types is available in Objective-C. |
| |
| Interoperability with C++11 lambdas |
| ----------------------------------- |
| |
| Clang provides interoperability between C++11 lambdas and blocks-based APIs, by |
| permitting a lambda to be implicitly converted to a block pointer with the |
| corresponding signature. For example, consider an API such as ``NSArray``'s |
| array-sorting method: |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| - (NSArray *)sortedArrayUsingComparator:(NSComparator)cmptr; |
| |
| ``NSComparator`` is simply a typedef for the block pointer ``NSComparisonResult |
| (^)(id, id)``, and parameters of this type are generally provided with block |
| literals as arguments. However, one can also use a C++11 lambda so long as it |
| provides the same signature (in this case, accepting two parameters of type |
| ``id`` and returning an ``NSComparisonResult``): |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| NSArray *array = @[@"string 1", @"string 21", @"string 12", @"String 11", |
| @"String 02"]; |
| const NSStringCompareOptions comparisonOptions |
| = NSCaseInsensitiveSearch | NSNumericSearch | |
| NSWidthInsensitiveSearch | NSForcedOrderingSearch; |
| NSLocale *currentLocale = [NSLocale currentLocale]; |
| NSArray *sorted |
| = [array sortedArrayUsingComparator:[=](id s1, id s2) -> NSComparisonResult { |
| NSRange string1Range = NSMakeRange(0, [s1 length]); |
| return [s1 compare:s2 options:comparisonOptions |
| range:string1Range locale:currentLocale]; |
| }]; |
| NSLog(@"sorted: %@", sorted); |
| |
| This code relies on an implicit conversion from the type of the lambda |
| expression (an unnamed, local class type called the *closure type*) to the |
| corresponding block pointer type. The conversion itself is expressed by a |
| conversion operator in that closure type that produces a block pointer with the |
| same signature as the lambda itself, e.g., |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| operator NSComparisonResult (^)(id, id)() const; |
| |
| This conversion function returns a new block that simply forwards the two |
| parameters to the lambda object (which it captures by copy), then returns the |
| result. The returned block is first copied (with ``Block_copy``) and then |
| autoreleased. As an optimization, if a lambda expression is immediately |
| converted to a block pointer (as in the first example, above), then the block |
| is not copied and autoreleased: rather, it is given the same lifetime as a |
| block literal written at that point in the program, which avoids the overhead |
| of copying a block to the heap in the common case. |
| |
| The conversion from a lambda to a block pointer is only available in |
| Objective-C++, and not in C++ with blocks, due to its use of Objective-C memory |
| management (autorelease). |
| |
| Object Literals and Subscripting |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Clang provides support for :doc:`Object Literals and Subscripting |
| <ObjectiveCLiterals>` in Objective-C, which simplifies common Objective-C |
| programming patterns, makes programs more concise, and improves the safety of |
| container creation. There are several feature macros associated with object |
| literals and subscripting: ``__has_feature(objc_array_literals)`` tests the |
| availability of array literals; ``__has_feature(objc_dictionary_literals)`` |
| tests the availability of dictionary literals; |
| ``__has_feature(objc_subscripting)`` tests the availability of object |
| subscripting. |
| |
| Objective-C Autosynthesis of Properties |
| --------------------------------------- |
| |
| Clang provides support for autosynthesis of declared properties. Using this |
| feature, clang provides default synthesis of those properties not declared |
| @dynamic and not having user provided backing getter and setter methods. |
| ``__has_feature(objc_default_synthesize_properties)`` checks for availability |
| of this feature in version of clang being used. |
| |
| .. _langext-objc_method_family: |
| |
| The ``objc_method_family`` attribute |
| ------------------------------------ |
| |
| Many methods in Objective-C have conventional meanings determined by their |
| selectors. It is sometimes useful to be able to mark a method as having a |
| particular conventional meaning despite not having the right selector, or as |
| not having the conventional meaning that its selector would suggest. For these |
| use cases, we provide an attribute to specifically describe the "method family" |
| that a method belongs to. |
| |
| **Usage**: ``__attribute__((objc_method_family(X)))``, where ``X`` is one of |
| ``none``, ``alloc``, ``copy``, ``init``, ``mutableCopy``, or ``new``. This |
| attribute can only be placed at the end of a method declaration: |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| - (NSString *)initMyStringValue __attribute__((objc_method_family(none))); |
| |
| Users who do not wish to change the conventional meaning of a method, and who |
| merely want to document its non-standard retain and release semantics, should |
| use the :ref:`retaining behavior attributes <langext-objc-retain-release>` |
| described below. |
| |
| Query for this feature with ``__has_attribute(objc_method_family)``. |
| |
| .. _langext-objc-retain-release: |
| |
| Objective-C retaining behavior attributes |
| ----------------------------------------- |
| |
| In Objective-C, functions and methods are generally assumed to follow the |
| `Cocoa Memory Management |
| <http://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/MemoryMgmt/Articles/mmRules.html>`_ |
| conventions for ownership of object arguments and |
| return values. However, there are exceptions, and so Clang provides attributes |
| to allow these exceptions to be documented. This are used by ARC and the |
| `static analyzer <http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org>`_ Some exceptions may be |
| better described using the :ref:`objc_method_family |
| <langext-objc_method_family>` attribute instead. |
| |
| **Usage**: The ``ns_returns_retained``, ``ns_returns_not_retained``, |
| ``ns_returns_autoreleased``, ``cf_returns_retained``, and |
| ``cf_returns_not_retained`` attributes can be placed on methods and functions |
| that return Objective-C or CoreFoundation objects. They are commonly placed at |
| the end of a function prototype or method declaration: |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| id foo() __attribute__((ns_returns_retained)); |
| |
| - (NSString *)bar:(int)x __attribute__((ns_returns_retained)); |
| |
| The ``*_returns_retained`` attributes specify that the returned object has a +1 |
| retain count. The ``*_returns_not_retained`` attributes specify that the return |
| object has a +0 retain count, even if the normal convention for its selector |
| would be +1. ``ns_returns_autoreleased`` specifies that the returned object is |
| +0, but is guaranteed to live at least as long as the next flush of an |
| autorelease pool. |
| |
| **Usage**: The ``ns_consumed`` and ``cf_consumed`` attributes can be placed on |
| an parameter declaration; they specify that the argument is expected to have a |
| +1 retain count, which will be balanced in some way by the function or method. |
| The ``ns_consumes_self`` attribute can only be placed on an Objective-C |
| method; it specifies that the method expects its ``self`` parameter to have a |
| +1 retain count, which it will balance in some way. |
| |
| .. code-block:: objc |
| |
| void foo(__attribute__((ns_consumed)) NSString *string); |
| |
| - (void) bar __attribute__((ns_consumes_self)); |
| - (void) baz:(id) __attribute__((ns_consumed)) x; |
| |
| Further examples of these attributes are available in the static analyzer's `list of annotations for analysis |
| <http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/annotations.html#cocoa_mem>`_. |
| |
| Query for these features with ``__has_attribute(ns_consumed)``, |
| ``__has_attribute(ns_returns_retained)``, etc. |
| |
| |
| Function Overloading in C |
| ========================= |
| |
| Clang provides support for C++ function overloading in C. Function overloading |
| in C is introduced using the ``overloadable`` attribute. For example, one |
| might provide several overloaded versions of a ``tgsin`` function that invokes |
| the appropriate standard function computing the sine of a value with ``float``, |
| ``double``, or ``long double`` precision: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| #include <math.h> |
| float __attribute__((overloadable)) tgsin(float x) { return sinf(x); } |
| double __attribute__((overloadable)) tgsin(double x) { return sin(x); } |
| long double __attribute__((overloadable)) tgsin(long double x) { return sinl(x); } |
| |
| Given these declarations, one can call ``tgsin`` with a ``float`` value to |
| receive a ``float`` result, with a ``double`` to receive a ``double`` result, |
| etc. Function overloading in C follows the rules of C++ function overloading |
| to pick the best overload given the call arguments, with a few C-specific |
| semantics: |
| |
| * Conversion from ``float`` or ``double`` to ``long double`` is ranked as a |
| floating-point promotion (per C99) rather than as a floating-point conversion |
| (as in C++). |
| |
| * A conversion from a pointer of type ``T*`` to a pointer of type ``U*`` is |
| considered a pointer conversion (with conversion rank) if ``T`` and ``U`` are |
| compatible types. |
| |
| * A conversion from type ``T`` to a value of type ``U`` is permitted if ``T`` |
| and ``U`` are compatible types. This conversion is given "conversion" rank. |
| |
| The declaration of ``overloadable`` functions is restricted to function |
| declarations and definitions. Most importantly, if any function with a given |
| name is given the ``overloadable`` attribute, then all function declarations |
| and definitions with that name (and in that scope) must have the |
| ``overloadable`` attribute. This rule even applies to redeclarations of |
| functions whose original declaration had the ``overloadable`` attribute, e.g., |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| int f(int) __attribute__((overloadable)); |
| float f(float); // error: declaration of "f" must have the "overloadable" attribute |
| |
| int g(int) __attribute__((overloadable)); |
| int g(int) { } // error: redeclaration of "g" must also have the "overloadable" attribute |
| |
| Functions marked ``overloadable`` must have prototypes. Therefore, the |
| following code is ill-formed: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| int h() __attribute__((overloadable)); // error: h does not have a prototype |
| |
| However, ``overloadable`` functions are allowed to use a ellipsis even if there |
| are no named parameters (as is permitted in C++). This feature is particularly |
| useful when combined with the ``unavailable`` attribute: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| void honeypot(...) __attribute__((overloadable, unavailable)); // calling me is an error |
| |
| Functions declared with the ``overloadable`` attribute have their names mangled |
| according to the same rules as C++ function names. For example, the three |
| ``tgsin`` functions in our motivating example get the mangled names |
| ``_Z5tgsinf``, ``_Z5tgsind``, and ``_Z5tgsine``, respectively. There are two |
| caveats to this use of name mangling: |
| |
| * Future versions of Clang may change the name mangling of functions overloaded |
| in C, so you should not depend on an specific mangling. To be completely |
| safe, we strongly urge the use of ``static inline`` with ``overloadable`` |
| functions. |
| |
| * The ``overloadable`` attribute has almost no meaning when used in C++, |
| because names will already be mangled and functions are already overloadable. |
| However, when an ``overloadable`` function occurs within an ``extern "C"`` |
| linkage specification, it's name *will* be mangled in the same way as it |
| would in C. |
| |
| Query for this feature with ``__has_extension(attribute_overloadable)``. |
| |
| Initializer lists for complex numbers in C |
| ========================================== |
| |
| clang supports an extension which allows the following in C: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #include <math.h> |
| #include <complex.h> |
| complex float x = { 1.0f, INFINITY }; // Init to (1, Inf) |
| |
| This construct is useful because there is no way to separately initialize the |
| real and imaginary parts of a complex variable in standard C, given that clang |
| does not support ``_Imaginary``. (Clang also supports the ``__real__`` and |
| ``__imag__`` extensions from gcc, which help in some cases, but are not usable |
| in static initializers.) |
| |
| Note that this extension does not allow eliding the braces; the meaning of the |
| following two lines is different: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| complex float x[] = { { 1.0f, 1.0f } }; // [0] = (1, 1) |
| complex float x[] = { 1.0f, 1.0f }; // [0] = (1, 0), [1] = (1, 0) |
| |
| This extension also works in C++ mode, as far as that goes, but does not apply |
| to the C++ ``std::complex``. (In C++11, list initialization allows the same |
| syntax to be used with ``std::complex`` with the same meaning.) |
| |
| Builtin Functions |
| ================= |
| |
| Clang supports a number of builtin library functions with the same syntax as |
| GCC, including things like ``__builtin_nan``, ``__builtin_constant_p``, |
| ``__builtin_choose_expr``, ``__builtin_types_compatible_p``, |
| ``__sync_fetch_and_add``, etc. In addition to the GCC builtins, Clang supports |
| a number of builtins that GCC does not, which are listed here. |
| |
| Please note that Clang does not and will not support all of the GCC builtins |
| for vector operations. Instead of using builtins, you should use the functions |
| defined in target-specific header files like ``<xmmintrin.h>``, which define |
| portable wrappers for these. Many of the Clang versions of these functions are |
| implemented directly in terms of :ref:`extended vector support |
| <langext-vectors>` instead of builtins, in order to reduce the number of |
| builtins that we need to implement. |
| |
| ``__builtin_readcyclecounter`` |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| ``__builtin_readcyclecounter`` is used to access the cycle counter register (or |
| a similar low-latency, high-accuracy clock) on those targets that support it. |
| |
| **Syntax**: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| __builtin_readcyclecounter() |
| |
| **Example of Use**: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| unsigned long long t0 = __builtin_readcyclecounter(); |
| do_something(); |
| unsigned long long t1 = __builtin_readcyclecounter(); |
| unsigned long long cycles_to_do_something = t1 - t0; // assuming no overflow |
| |
| **Description**: |
| |
| The ``__builtin_readcyclecounter()`` builtin returns the cycle counter value, |
| which may be either global or process/thread-specific depending on the target. |
| As the backing counters often overflow quickly (on the order of seconds) this |
| should only be used for timing small intervals. When not supported by the |
| target, the return value is always zero. This builtin takes no arguments and |
| produces an unsigned long long result. |
| |
| Query for this feature with ``__has_builtin(__builtin_readcyclecounter)``. |
| |
| .. _langext-__builtin_shufflevector: |
| |
| ``__builtin_shufflevector`` |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| ``__builtin_shufflevector`` is used to express generic vector |
| permutation/shuffle/swizzle operations. This builtin is also very important |
| for the implementation of various target-specific header files like |
| ``<xmmintrin.h>``. |
| |
| **Syntax**: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| __builtin_shufflevector(vec1, vec2, index1, index2, ...) |
| |
| **Examples**: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| // Identity operation - return 4-element vector V1. |
| __builtin_shufflevector(V1, V1, 0, 1, 2, 3) |
| |
| // "Splat" element 0 of V1 into a 4-element result. |
| __builtin_shufflevector(V1, V1, 0, 0, 0, 0) |
| |
| // Reverse 4-element vector V1. |
| __builtin_shufflevector(V1, V1, 3, 2, 1, 0) |
| |
| // Concatenate every other element of 4-element vectors V1 and V2. |
| __builtin_shufflevector(V1, V2, 0, 2, 4, 6) |
| |
| // Concatenate every other element of 8-element vectors V1 and V2. |
| __builtin_shufflevector(V1, V2, 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14) |
| |
| **Description**: |
| |
| The first two arguments to ``__builtin_shufflevector`` are vectors that have |
| the same element type. The remaining arguments are a list of integers that |
| specify the elements indices of the first two vectors that should be extracted |
| and returned in a new vector. These element indices are numbered sequentially |
| starting with the first vector, continuing into the second vector. Thus, if |
| ``vec1`` is a 4-element vector, index 5 would refer to the second element of |
| ``vec2``. |
| |
| The result of ``__builtin_shufflevector`` is a vector with the same element |
| type as ``vec1``/``vec2`` but that has an element count equal to the number of |
| indices specified. |
| |
| Query for this feature with ``__has_builtin(__builtin_shufflevector)``. |
| |
| ``__builtin_unreachable`` |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| ``__builtin_unreachable`` is used to indicate that a specific point in the |
| program cannot be reached, even if the compiler might otherwise think it can. |
| This is useful to improve optimization and eliminates certain warnings. For |
| example, without the ``__builtin_unreachable`` in the example below, the |
| compiler assumes that the inline asm can fall through and prints a "function |
| declared '``noreturn``' should not return" warning. |
| |
| **Syntax**: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| __builtin_unreachable() |
| |
| **Example of use**: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| void myabort(void) __attribute__((noreturn)); |
| void myabort(void) { |
| asm("int3"); |
| __builtin_unreachable(); |
| } |
| |
| **Description**: |
| |
| The ``__builtin_unreachable()`` builtin has completely undefined behavior. |
| Since it has undefined behavior, it is a statement that it is never reached and |
| the optimizer can take advantage of this to produce better code. This builtin |
| takes no arguments and produces a void result. |
| |
| Query for this feature with ``__has_builtin(__builtin_unreachable)``. |
| |
| ``__sync_swap`` |
| --------------- |
| |
| ``__sync_swap`` is used to atomically swap integers or pointers in memory. |
| |
| **Syntax**: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| type __sync_swap(type *ptr, type value, ...) |
| |
| **Example of Use**: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| int old_value = __sync_swap(&value, new_value); |
| |
| **Description**: |
| |
| The ``__sync_swap()`` builtin extends the existing ``__sync_*()`` family of |
| atomic intrinsics to allow code to atomically swap the current value with the |
| new value. More importantly, it helps developers write more efficient and |
| correct code by avoiding expensive loops around |
| ``__sync_bool_compare_and_swap()`` or relying on the platform specific |
| implementation details of ``__sync_lock_test_and_set()``. The |
| ``__sync_swap()`` builtin is a full barrier. |
| |
| Multiprecision Arithmetic Builtins |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| Clang provides a set of builtins which expose multiprecision arithmetic in a |
| manner amenable to C. They all have the following form: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| unsigned x = ..., y = ..., carryin = ..., carryout; |
| unsigned sum = __builtin_addc(x, y, carryin, &carryout); |
| |
| Thus one can form a multiprecision addition chain in the following manner: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| unsigned *x, *y, *z, carryin=0, carryout; |
| z[0] = __builtin_addc(x[0], y[0], carryin, &carryout); |
| carryin = carryout; |
| z[1] = __builtin_addc(x[1], y[1], carryin, &carryout); |
| carryin = carryout; |
| z[2] = __builtin_addc(x[2], y[2], carryin, &carryout); |
| carryin = carryout; |
| z[3] = __builtin_addc(x[3], y[3], carryin, &carryout); |
| |
| The complete list of builtins are: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| unsigned short __builtin_addcs (unsigned short x, unsigned short y, unsigned short carryin, unsigned short *carryout); |
| unsigned __builtin_addc (unsigned x, unsigned y, unsigned carryin, unsigned *carryout); |
| unsigned long __builtin_addcl (unsigned long x, unsigned long y, unsigned long carryin, unsigned long *carryout); |
| unsigned long long __builtin_addcll(unsigned long long x, unsigned long long y, unsigned long long carryin, unsigned long long *carryout); |
| unsigned short __builtin_subcs (unsigned short x, unsigned short y, unsigned short carryin, unsigned short *carryout); |
| unsigned __builtin_subc (unsigned x, unsigned y, unsigned carryin, unsigned *carryout); |
| unsigned long __builtin_subcl (unsigned long x, unsigned long y, unsigned long carryin, unsigned long *carryout); |
| unsigned long long __builtin_subcll(unsigned long long x, unsigned long long y, unsigned long long carryin, unsigned long long *carryout); |
| |
| .. _langext-__c11_atomic: |
| |
| __c11_atomic builtins |
| --------------------- |
| |
| Clang provides a set of builtins which are intended to be used to implement |
| C11's ``<stdatomic.h>`` header. These builtins provide the semantics of the |
| ``_explicit`` form of the corresponding C11 operation, and are named with a |
| ``__c11_`` prefix. The supported operations are: |
| |
| * ``__c11_atomic_init`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_thread_fence`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_signal_fence`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_is_lock_free`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_store`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_load`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_exchange`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_compare_exchange_strong`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_compare_exchange_weak`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_fetch_add`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_fetch_sub`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_fetch_and`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_fetch_or`` |
| * ``__c11_atomic_fetch_xor`` |
| |
| Non-standard C++11 Attributes |
| ============================= |
| |
| Clang's non-standard C++11 attributes live in the ``clang`` attribute |
| namespace. |
| |
| The ``clang::fallthrough`` attribute |
| ------------------------------------ |
| |
| The ``clang::fallthrough`` attribute is used along with the |
| ``-Wimplicit-fallthrough`` argument to annotate intentional fall-through |
| between switch labels. It can only be applied to a null statement placed at a |
| point of execution between any statement and the next switch label. It is |
| common to mark these places with a specific comment, but this attribute is |
| meant to replace comments with a more strict annotation, which can be checked |
| by the compiler. This attribute doesn't change semantics of the code and can |
| be used wherever an intended fall-through occurs. It is designed to mimic |
| control-flow statements like ``break;``, so it can be placed in most places |
| where ``break;`` can, but only if there are no statements on the execution path |
| between it and the next switch label. |
| |
| Here is an example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| // compile with -Wimplicit-fallthrough |
| switch (n) { |
| case 22: |
| case 33: // no warning: no statements between case labels |
| f(); |
| case 44: // warning: unannotated fall-through |
| g(); |
| [[clang::fallthrough]]; |
| case 55: // no warning |
| if (x) { |
| h(); |
| break; |
| } |
| else { |
| i(); |
| [[clang::fallthrough]]; |
| } |
| case 66: // no warning |
| p(); |
| [[clang::fallthrough]]; // warning: fallthrough annotation does not |
| // directly precede case label |
| q(); |
| case 77: // warning: unannotated fall-through |
| r(); |
| } |
| |
| ``gnu::`` attributes |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Clang also supports GCC's ``gnu`` attribute namespace. All GCC attributes which |
| are accepted with the ``__attribute__((foo))`` syntax are also accepted as |
| ``[[gnu::foo]]``. This only extends to attributes which are specified by GCC |
| (see the list of `GCC function attributes |
| <http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Function-Attributes.html>`_, `GCC variable |
| attributes <http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Variable-Attributes.html>`_, and |
| `GCC type attributes |
| <http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Type-Attributes.html>`_. As with the GCC |
| implementation, these attributes must appertain to the *declarator-id* in a |
| declaration, which means they must go either at the start of the declaration or |
| immediately after the name being declared. |
| |
| For example, this applies the GNU ``unused`` attribute to ``a`` and ``f``, and |
| also applies the GNU ``noreturn`` attribute to ``f``. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| [[gnu::unused]] int a, f [[gnu::noreturn]] (); |
| |
| Target-Specific Extensions |
| ========================== |
| |
| Clang supports some language features conditionally on some targets. |
| |
| X86/X86-64 Language Extensions |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| The X86 backend has these language extensions: |
| |
| Memory references off the GS segment |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Annotating a pointer with address space #256 causes it to be code generated |
| relative to the X86 GS segment register, and address space #257 causes it to be |
| relative to the X86 FS segment. Note that this is a very very low-level |
| feature that should only be used if you know what you're doing (for example in |
| an OS kernel). |
| |
| Here is an example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #define GS_RELATIVE __attribute__((address_space(256))) |
| int foo(int GS_RELATIVE *P) { |
| return *P; |
| } |
| |
| Which compiles to (on X86-32): |
| |
| .. code-block:: gas |
| |
| _foo: |
| movl 4(%esp), %eax |
| movl %gs:(%eax), %eax |
| ret |
| |
| Extensions for Static Analysis |
| ============================== |
| |
| Clang supports additional attributes that are useful for documenting program |
| invariants and rules for static analysis tools, such as the `Clang Static |
| Analyzer <http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/>`_. These attributes are documented |
| in the analyzer's `list of source-level annotations |
| <http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/annotations.html>`_. |
| |
| |
| Extensions for Dynamic Analysis |
| =============================== |
| |
| .. _langext-address_sanitizer: |
| |
| AddressSanitizer |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(address_sanitizer)`` to check if the code is being built |
| with :doc:`AddressSanitizer`. |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((no_sanitize_address))`` |
| on a function declaration |
| to specify that address safety instrumentation (e.g. AddressSanitizer) should |
| not be applied to that function. |
| |
| .. _langext-thread_sanitizer: |
| |
| ThreadSanitizer |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Use ``__has_feature(thread_sanitizer)`` to check if the code is being built |
| with :doc:`ThreadSanitizer`. |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((no_sanitize_thread))`` on a function declaration |
| to specify that checks for data races on plain (non-atomic) memory accesses |
| should not be inserted by ThreadSanitizer. |
| The function may still be instrumented by the tool |
| to avoid false positives in other places. |
| |
| .. _langext-memory_sanitizer: |
| |
| MemorySanitizer |
| ---------------- |
| Use ``__has_feature(memory_sanitizer)`` to check if the code is being built |
| with :doc:`MemorySanitizer`. |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((no_sanitize_memory))`` on a function declaration |
| to specify that checks for uninitialized memory should not be inserted |
| (e.g. by MemorySanitizer). The function may still be instrumented by the tool |
| to avoid false positives in other places. |
| |
| |
| Thread-Safety Annotation Checking |
| ================================= |
| |
| Clang supports additional attributes for checking basic locking policies in |
| multithreaded programs. Clang currently parses the following list of |
| attributes, although **the implementation for these annotations is currently in |
| development.** For more details, see the `GCC implementation |
| <http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/ThreadSafetyAnnotation>`_. |
| |
| ``no_thread_safety_analysis`` |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((no_thread_safety_analysis))`` on a function declaration to |
| specify that the thread safety analysis should not be run on that function. |
| This attribute provides an escape hatch (e.g. for situations when it is |
| difficult to annotate the locking policy). |
| |
| ``lockable`` |
| ------------ |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((lockable))`` on a class definition to specify that it has |
| a lockable type (e.g. a Mutex class). This annotation is primarily used to |
| check consistency. |
| |
| ``scoped_lockable`` |
| ------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((scoped_lockable))`` on a class definition to specify that |
| it has a "scoped" lockable type. Objects of this type will acquire the lock |
| upon construction and release it upon going out of scope. This annotation is |
| primarily used to check consistency. |
| |
| ``guarded_var`` |
| --------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((guarded_var))`` on a variable declaration to specify that |
| the variable must be accessed while holding some lock. |
| |
| ``pt_guarded_var`` |
| ------------------ |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((pt_guarded_var))`` on a pointer declaration to specify |
| that the pointer must be dereferenced while holding some lock. |
| |
| ``guarded_by(l)`` |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((guarded_by(l)))`` on a variable declaration to specify |
| that the variable must be accessed while holding lock ``l``. |
| |
| ``pt_guarded_by(l)`` |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((pt_guarded_by(l)))`` on a pointer declaration to specify |
| that the pointer must be dereferenced while holding lock ``l``. |
| |
| ``acquired_before(...)`` |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((acquired_before(...)))`` on a declaration of a lockable |
| variable to specify that the lock must be acquired before all attribute |
| arguments. Arguments must be lockable type, and there must be at least one |
| argument. |
| |
| ``acquired_after(...)`` |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((acquired_after(...)))`` on a declaration of a lockable |
| variable to specify that the lock must be acquired after all attribute |
| arguments. Arguments must be lockable type, and there must be at least one |
| argument. |
| |
| ``exclusive_lock_function(...)`` |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((exclusive_lock_function(...)))`` on a function declaration |
| to specify that the function acquires all listed locks exclusively. This |
| attribute takes zero or more arguments: either of lockable type or integers |
| indexing into function parameters of lockable type. If no arguments are given, |
| the acquired lock is implicitly ``this`` of the enclosing object. |
| |
| ``shared_lock_function(...)`` |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((shared_lock_function(...)))`` on a function declaration to |
| specify that the function acquires all listed locks, although the locks may be |
| shared (e.g. read locks). This attribute takes zero or more arguments: either |
| of lockable type or integers indexing into function parameters of lockable |
| type. If no arguments are given, the acquired lock is implicitly ``this`` of |
| the enclosing object. |
| |
| ``exclusive_trylock_function(...)`` |
| ----------------------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((exclusive_lock_function(...)))`` on a function declaration |
| to specify that the function will try (without blocking) to acquire all listed |
| locks exclusively. This attribute takes one or more arguments. The first |
| argument is an integer or boolean value specifying the return value of a |
| successful lock acquisition. The remaining arugments are either of lockable |
| type or integers indexing into function parameters of lockable type. If only |
| one argument is given, the acquired lock is implicitly ``this`` of the |
| enclosing object. |
| |
| ``shared_trylock_function(...)`` |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((shared_lock_function(...)))`` on a function declaration to |
| specify that the function will try (without blocking) to acquire all listed |
| locks, although the locks may be shared (e.g. read locks). This attribute |
| takes one or more arguments. The first argument is an integer or boolean value |
| specifying the return value of a successful lock acquisition. The remaining |
| arugments are either of lockable type or integers indexing into function |
| parameters of lockable type. If only one argument is given, the acquired lock |
| is implicitly ``this`` of the enclosing object. |
| |
| ``unlock_function(...)`` |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((unlock_function(...)))`` on a function declaration to |
| specify that the function release all listed locks. This attribute takes zero |
| or more arguments: either of lockable type or integers indexing into function |
| parameters of lockable type. If no arguments are given, the acquired lock is |
| implicitly ``this`` of the enclosing object. |
| |
| ``lock_returned(l)`` |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((lock_returned(l)))`` on a function declaration to specify |
| that the function returns lock ``l`` (``l`` must be of lockable type). This |
| annotation is used to aid in resolving lock expressions. |
| |
| ``locks_excluded(...)`` |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((locks_excluded(...)))`` on a function declaration to |
| specify that the function must not be called with the listed locks. Arguments |
| must be lockable type, and there must be at least one argument. |
| |
| ``exclusive_locks_required(...)`` |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((exclusive_locks_required(...)))`` on a function |
| declaration to specify that the function must be called while holding the |
| listed exclusive locks. Arguments must be lockable type, and there must be at |
| least one argument. |
| |
| ``shared_locks_required(...)`` |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((shared_locks_required(...)))`` on a function declaration |
| to specify that the function must be called while holding the listed shared |
| locks. Arguments must be lockable type, and there must be at least one |
| argument. |
| |
| Type Safety Checking |
| ==================== |
| |
| Clang supports additional attributes to enable checking type safety properties |
| that can't be enforced by C type system. Usecases include: |
| |
| * MPI library implementations, where these attributes enable checking that |
| buffer type matches the passed ``MPI_Datatype``; |
| * for HDF5 library there is a similar usecase as MPI; |
| * checking types of variadic functions' arguments for functions like |
| ``fcntl()`` and ``ioctl()``. |
| |
| You can detect support for these attributes with ``__has_attribute()``. For |
| example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #if defined(__has_attribute) |
| # if __has_attribute(argument_with_type_tag) && \ |
| __has_attribute(pointer_with_type_tag) && \ |
| __has_attribute(type_tag_for_datatype) |
| # define ATTR_MPI_PWT(buffer_idx, type_idx) __attribute__((pointer_with_type_tag(mpi,buffer_idx,type_idx))) |
| /* ... other macros ... */ |
| # endif |
| #endif |
| |
| #if !defined(ATTR_MPI_PWT) |
| # define ATTR_MPI_PWT(buffer_idx, type_idx) |
| #endif |
| |
| int MPI_Send(void *buf, int count, MPI_Datatype datatype /*, other args omitted */) |
| ATTR_MPI_PWT(1,3); |
| |
| ``argument_with_type_tag(...)`` |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((argument_with_type_tag(arg_kind, arg_idx, |
| type_tag_idx)))`` on a function declaration to specify that the function |
| accepts a type tag that determines the type of some other argument. |
| ``arg_kind`` is an identifier that should be used when annotating all |
| applicable type tags. |
| |
| This attribute is primarily useful for checking arguments of variadic functions |
| (``pointer_with_type_tag`` can be used in most of non-variadic cases). |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| int fcntl(int fd, int cmd, ...) |
| __attribute__(( argument_with_type_tag(fcntl,3,2) )); |
| |
| ``pointer_with_type_tag(...)`` |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Use ``__attribute__((pointer_with_type_tag(ptr_kind, ptr_idx, type_tag_idx)))`` |
| on a function declaration to specify that the function accepts a type tag that |
| determines the pointee type of some other pointer argument. |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| int MPI_Send(void *buf, int count, MPI_Datatype datatype /*, other args omitted */) |
| __attribute__(( pointer_with_type_tag(mpi,1,3) )); |
| |
| ``type_tag_for_datatype(...)`` |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Clang supports annotating type tags of two forms. |
| |
| * **Type tag that is an expression containing a reference to some declared |
| identifier.** Use ``__attribute__((type_tag_for_datatype(kind, type)))`` on a |
| declaration with that identifier: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| extern struct mpi_datatype mpi_datatype_int |
| __attribute__(( type_tag_for_datatype(mpi,int) )); |
| #define MPI_INT ((MPI_Datatype) &mpi_datatype_int) |
| |
| * **Type tag that is an integral literal.** Introduce a ``static const`` |
| variable with a corresponding initializer value and attach |
| ``__attribute__((type_tag_for_datatype(kind, type)))`` on that declaration, |
| for example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #define MPI_INT ((MPI_Datatype) 42) |
| static const MPI_Datatype mpi_datatype_int |
| __attribute__(( type_tag_for_datatype(mpi,int) )) = 42 |
| |
| The attribute also accepts an optional third argument that determines how the |
| expression is compared to the type tag. There are two supported flags: |
| |
| * ``layout_compatible`` will cause types to be compared according to |
| layout-compatibility rules (C++11 [class.mem] p 17, 18). This is |
| implemented to support annotating types like ``MPI_DOUBLE_INT``. |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /* In mpi.h */ |
| struct internal_mpi_double_int { double d; int i; }; |
| extern struct mpi_datatype mpi_datatype_double_int |
| __attribute__(( type_tag_for_datatype(mpi, struct internal_mpi_double_int, layout_compatible) )); |
| |
| #define MPI_DOUBLE_INT ((MPI_Datatype) &mpi_datatype_double_int) |
| |
| /* In user code */ |
| struct my_pair { double a; int b; }; |
| struct my_pair *buffer; |
| MPI_Send(buffer, 1, MPI_DOUBLE_INT /*, ... */); // no warning |
| |
| struct my_int_pair { int a; int b; } |
| struct my_int_pair *buffer2; |
| MPI_Send(buffer2, 1, MPI_DOUBLE_INT /*, ... */); // warning: actual buffer element |
| // type 'struct my_int_pair' |
| // doesn't match specified MPI_Datatype |
| |
| * ``must_be_null`` specifies that the expression should be a null pointer |
| constant, for example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /* In mpi.h */ |
| extern struct mpi_datatype mpi_datatype_null |
| __attribute__(( type_tag_for_datatype(mpi, void, must_be_null) )); |
| |
| #define MPI_DATATYPE_NULL ((MPI_Datatype) &mpi_datatype_null) |
| |
| /* In user code */ |
| MPI_Send(buffer, 1, MPI_DATATYPE_NULL /*, ... */); // warning: MPI_DATATYPE_NULL |
| // was specified but buffer |
| // is not a null pointer |
| |
| Format String Checking |
| ====================== |
| |
| Clang supports the ``format`` attribute, which indicates that the function |
| accepts a ``printf`` or ``scanf``-like format string and corresponding |
| arguments or a ``va_list`` that contains these arguments. |
| |
| Please see `GCC documentation about format attribute |
| <http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Function-Attributes.html>`_ to find details |
| about attribute syntax. |
| |
| Clang implements two kinds of checks with this attribute. |
| |
| #. Clang checks that the function with the ``format`` attribute is called with |
| a format string that uses format specifiers that are allowed, and that |
| arguments match the format string. This is the ``-Wformat`` warning, it is |
| on by default. |
| |
| #. Clang checks that the format string argument is a literal string. This is |
| the ``-Wformat-nonliteral`` warning, it is off by default. |
| |
| Clang implements this mostly the same way as GCC, but there is a difference |
| for functions that accept a ``va_list`` argument (for example, ``vprintf``). |
| GCC does not emit ``-Wformat-nonliteral`` warning for calls to such |
| fuctions. Clang does not warn if the format string comes from a function |
| parameter, where the function is annotated with a compatible attribute, |
| otherwise it warns. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| __attribute__((__format__ (__scanf__, 1, 3))) |
| void foo(const char* s, char *buf, ...) { |
| va_list ap; |
| va_start(ap, buf); |
| |
| vprintf(s, ap); // warning: format string is not a string literal |
| } |
| |
| In this case we warn because ``s`` contains a format string for a |
| ``scanf``-like function, but it is passed to a ``printf``-like function. |
| |
| If the attribute is removed, clang still warns, because the format string is |
| not a string literal. |
| |
| Another example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| __attribute__((__format__ (__printf__, 1, 3))) |
| void foo(const char* s, char *buf, ...) { |
| va_list ap; |
| va_start(ap, buf); |
| |
| vprintf(s, ap); // warning |
| } |
| |
| In this case Clang does not warn because the format string ``s`` and |
| the corresponding arguments are annotated. If the arguments are |
| incorrect, the caller of ``foo`` will receive a warning. |