This patch runs clang-format on all of libcxx/include and libcxx/src, in
accordance with the RFC discussed at [1]. Follow-up patches will format
the benchmarks, the test suite and remaining parts of the code. I'm
splitting this one into its own patch so the diff is a bit easier to
review.
This patch was generated with:
find libcxx/include libcxx/src -type f \
| grep -v 'module.modulemap.in' \
| grep -v 'CMakeLists.txt' \
| grep -v 'README.txt' \
| grep -v 'libcxx.imp' \
| grep -v '__config_site.in' \
| xargs clang-format -i
A Git merge driver is available in libcxx/utils/clang-format-merge-driver.sh
to help resolve merge and rebase issues across these formatting changes.
[1]: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-clang-formatting-all-of-libc-once-and-for-all
When cuchar is compiled independently on platforms that don't have <uchar.h>, it doesn't get a declaration of mbstate_t, and so makes an empty declaration for ::mbstate_t. That conflicts with the declarations in __mbstate_t.h and cwchar since both of those headers do get mbstate_t before making ::mbstate_t.
Change `__mbstate_t.h` to just get the underlying declaration for mbstate_t and not make a declaration for ::mbstate_t. Include __mbstate_t.h in uchar.h and wchar.h when their next headers aren't available so that at least mbstate_t gets defined.
Add __std_mbstate_t.h to declare ::mbstate_t for headers that need that when cuchar or cwchar aren't available (because either _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_WIDE_CHARACTERS or _LIBCPP_CXX03_LANG).
Reviewed By: ldionne, Mordante, #libc, philnik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148542
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