mirror of
https://github.com/capstone-engine/llvm-capstone.git
synced 2024-11-23 05:40:09 +00:00
615e6dd1c5
We recently noticed that the unwrap_iter.h file was pushing macros, but it was pushing them again instead of popping them at the end of the file. This led to libc++ basically swallowing any custom definition of these macros in user code: #define min HELLO #include <algorithm> // min is not HELLO anymore, it's not defined While investigating this issue, I noticed that our push/pop pragmas were actually entirely wrong too. Indeed, instead of pushing macros like `move`, we'd push `move(int, int)` in the pragma, which is not a valid macro name. As a result, we would not actually push macros like `move` -- instead we'd simply undefine them. This led to the following code not working: #define move HELLO #include <algorithm> // move is not HELLO anymore Fixing the pragma push/pop incantations led to a cascade of issues because we use identifiers like `move` in a large number of places, and all of these headers would now need to do the push/pop dance. This patch fixes all these issues. First, it adds a check that we don't swallow important names like min, max, move or refresh as explained above. This is done by augmenting the existing system_reserved_names.gen.py test to also check that the macros are what we expect after including each header. Second, it fixes the push/pop pragmas to work properly and adds missing pragmas to all the files I could detect a failure in via the newly added test. rdar://121365472 (cherry picked from commit 7b4622514d232ce5f7110dd8b20d90e81127c467) |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
formatter.h | ||
id.h | ||
jthread.h | ||
poll_with_backoff.h | ||
this_thread.h | ||
thread.h | ||
timed_backoff_policy.h |