tvl-depot/absl/synchronization/CMakeLists.txt

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#
# Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
#
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_library(
NAME
graphcycles_internal
HDRS
"internal/graphcycles.h"
SRCS
"internal/graphcycles.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_DEFAULT_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::base
absl::base_internal
Export of internal Abseil changes -- c99f979ad34f155fbeeea69b88bdc7458d89a21c by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Remove a floating point division by zero test. This isn't testing behavior related to the library, and MSVC warns about it in opt mode. PiperOrigin-RevId: 285220804 -- 68b015491f0dbf1ab547994673281abd1f34cd4b by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>: This CL introduces following changes to the class FlagImpl: * We eliminate the CommandLineFlagLocks struct. Instead callback guard and callback function are combined into a single CallbackData struct, while primary data lock is stored separately. * CallbackData member of class FlagImpl is initially set to be nullptr and is only allocated and initialized when a flag's callback is being set. For most flags we do not pay for the extra space and extra absl::Mutex now. * Primary data guard is stored in data_guard_ data member. This is a properly aligned character buffer of necessary size. During initialization of the flag we construct absl::Mutex in this space using placement new call. * We now avoid extra value copy after successful attempt to parse value out of string. Instead we swap flag's current value with tentative value we just produced. PiperOrigin-RevId: 285132636 -- ed45d118fb818969eb13094cf7827c885dfc562c by Tom Manshreck <shreck@google.com>: Change null-term* (and nul-term*) to NUL-term* in comments PiperOrigin-RevId: 285036610 -- 729619017944db895ce8d6d29c1995aa2e5628a5 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Use the Posix implementation of thread identity on MinGW. Some versions of MinGW suffer from thread_local bugs. PiperOrigin-RevId: 285022920 -- 39a25493503c76885bc3254c28f66a251c5b5bb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Implementation detail change. Add further ABSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN and _END annotation macros to files in Abseil. PiperOrigin-RevId: 285012012 GitOrigin-RevId: c99f979ad34f155fbeeea69b88bdc7458d89a21c Change-Id: I4c85d3704e45d11a9ac50d562f39640a6adbedc1
2019-12-12 19:36:03 +01:00
absl::config
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl::core_headers
absl::malloc_internal
absl::raw_logging_internal
)
absl_cc_library(
NAME
kernel_timeout_internal
HDRS
"internal/kernel_timeout.h"
COPTS
${ABSL_DEFAULT_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::core_headers
absl::raw_logging_internal
absl::time
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_library(
NAME
synchronization
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
HDRS
"barrier.h"
"blocking_counter.h"
"internal/create_thread_identity.h"
"internal/mutex_nonprod.inc"
"internal/per_thread_sem.h"
"internal/waiter.h"
"mutex.h"
"notification.h"
SRCS
"barrier.cc"
"blocking_counter.cc"
"internal/create_thread_identity.cc"
"internal/per_thread_sem.cc"
"internal/waiter.cc"
"notification.cc"
"mutex.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_DEFAULT_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::graphcycles_internal
absl::kernel_timeout_internal
absl::atomic_hook
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl::base
absl::base_internal
absl::config
absl::core_headers
absl::dynamic_annotations
absl::malloc_internal
absl::raw_logging_internal
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl::stacktrace
absl::symbolize
absl::time
Threads::Threads
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
PUBLIC
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_test(
NAME
barrier_test
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
SRCS
"barrier_test.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_TEST_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::synchronization
absl::time
gmock_main
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_test(
NAME
blocking_counter_test
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
SRCS
"blocking_counter_test.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_TEST_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::synchronization
absl::time
gmock_main
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_test(
NAME
graphcycles_test
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
SRCS
"internal/graphcycles_test.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_TEST_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::graphcycles_internal
absl::core_headers
absl::raw_logging_internal
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
gmock_main
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_library(
NAME
thread_pool
HDRS
"internal/thread_pool.h"
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 5a5dba4252e764e6737070bf0a31074bf23a3b41 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244898913 -- 3eb7d5b445ffbf08a104e39cd15aecf568417333 by Matt Calabrese <calabrese@google.com>: Introduce absl::is_trivially_move_constructible and absl::is_trivially_move_assignable, and update the absl::is_trivially_copy_constructible and absl::is_trivially_copy_assignable traits to use similar techniques (should now be closer to the standard behavior). PiperOrigin-RevId: 244859015 -- 7da05a24fa786cab3985de0c39a186d73dcbcfb5 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Fix misspellings in comments in raw_hash_set.h. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244754700 -- 5c057be96048f21473d5ec45005ab4dcd8dd354f by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Internal change PiperOrigin-RevId: 244744239 -- 592394e3c2e98f1238d3fb6fcb0d20c3e3739ba9 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Limit the raw_hash_set prefetch test to x86-64. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244737534 -- 99ebe4e003633c8ff7838b035b31a827994879ef by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Workaround warning 4091 in an MSVC header. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244701744 -- 0aa23f09a32efe7985ee55b0217190f08da42477 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Fix comment typo. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244659371 -- c6cdb87e9f28062c8daa29b3d8d68182ecc16383 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Fix -Wundef warnings and support -Wundef. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244244968 -- 06b81245f7696b20c3c63b0618d33ac25e29cad6 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Fix a typo in inlined_vector.h. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244230809 -- 94877a2125d2cfe837384240e4d6551f39d737e4 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Fix sysinfo_test for emscripten. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244198804 -- ec7783531ef7f9df2da37d341d61f7cb2bf843f0 by Shaindel Schwartz <shaindel@google.com>: Import of CCTZ from GitHub. Fixes #291. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244184598 -- b652c14fa95ea206c217487ee713b11f5d1762b3 by Matt Calabrese <calabrese@google.com>: Emulate the `in_place_index` and `in_place_type` variable templates such that they are syntactically usable in C++11 with `any` and `variant`. Also pull in the variable templates from namespace std when available. The main observable differences here are: 1) The types of `in_place_index_t<I>` and `in_place_type_t<T>` become function pointer types rather than structs when using the implementation that is not an alias of the std equivalents. 2) The types of `in_place_index<I>` and `in_place_type<T>` are not directly `in_place_index_t<I>` and `in_place_type_t<T>`, but rather they become function types that decay to the corresponding function pointer types. 3) The default constructor for `in_place_index_t` and `in_place_type_t` instantiations is no longer explicit, but for these templates I think that's less important than for something like `in_place_t` since the _type_t and _index_t versions basically never have their template parameter non-deduced when participating in overload resolution with conflicting candidates. 4) While idiomatic usage of `in_place_type_t` and `in_place_index_t` with std::variant and std::any should not be affected, there is the possibility that strange, non-idiomatic uses may be affected in the wild. 5) Default construction (rather than value-initialization) leads to a default-constructed pointer. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244180003 -- b9ac5a96581837ffa24532117b7ea302a5569751 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Fix MSVC debug assertion. isprint is undefined for values not representable as unsigned char or EOF. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244083005 -- 41758be6137c2f25e84b50f23938e49484be2903 by Shaindel Schwartz <shaindel@google.com>: Update config settings for Apple platforms. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244040587 -- c90df6a26db94b0305a0c954455a621542a89d91 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change PiperOrigin-RevId: 244024427 -- c71e9ceb89495354eca7d02bd905ffeaa9029aec by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Adds missing ABSL_DEFAULT_COPTS and ABSL_TEST_COPTS to CMakeLists.txt Don't error on deprecated declarations in tests. It is completely reasonable to test that code marked deprecated still works. PiperOrigin-RevId: 244003941 -- e1326a96527a8ba9b8d120161545260da9c4562e by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 243990623 -- 90b8e12934c7711e1bfcc0117d21288bf9220dee by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add variation of absl::Base64Escape/WebSafeBase64Escape that directly returns its result. PiperOrigin-RevId: 243894308 -- 317fef3344481ebc5c35712d42f5d8a0fa64dff4 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Enable raw logging in Emscripten builds. PiperOrigin-RevId: 243893705 GitOrigin-RevId: 5a5dba4252e764e6737070bf0a31074bf23a3b41 Change-Id: I19293aab73cc98d9e9bf6a9fdc30819764adb9db
2019-04-23 21:04:13 +02:00
COPTS
${ABSL_DEFAULT_COPTS}
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
DEPS
absl::synchronization
absl::core_headers
TESTONLY
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_test(
NAME
mutex_test
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
SRCS
"mutex_test.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_TEST_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::synchronization
absl::thread_pool
absl::base
absl::core_headers
absl::memory
absl::raw_logging_internal
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl::time
gmock_main
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_test(
NAME
notification_test
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
SRCS
"notification_test.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_TEST_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::synchronization
absl::time
gmock_main
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_library(
NAME
per_thread_sem_test_common
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
SRCS
"internal/per_thread_sem_test.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_TEST_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::synchronization
absl::base
absl::strings
absl::time
gmock
TESTONLY
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_test(
NAME
per_thread_sem_test
SRCS
"internal/per_thread_sem_test.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_TEST_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::per_thread_sem_test_common
absl::synchronization
absl::strings
absl::time
gmock_main
)
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
absl_cc_test(
NAME
lifetime_test
SRCS
"lifetime_test.cc"
COPTS
${ABSL_TEST_COPTS}
DEPS
absl::synchronization
absl::core_headers
absl::raw_logging_internal
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Add move semantics to absl::container_internal::CompressedTuple PiperOrigin-RevId: 225394165 -- 43da91e4f95a196b2e6b76f1c2f4158817b0ebb0 by Greg Falcon <gfalcon@google.com>: Add a constructor to allow for global absl::Mutex instances. This adds a new constexpr constructor to absl::Mutex, invoked with the absl::kConstInit tag value, which is intended to be used to construct Mutex instances with static storage duration. What's tricky about is absl::Mutex (like std::mutex) is not a trivially destructible class, so by the letter of the law, accessing a global Mutex instance after it is destroyed results in undefined behavior. Despite this, we take care in the destructor to not invalidate the memory layout of the Mutex. Using a kConstInit-constructed global Mutex after it is destroyed happens to work on the toolchains we use. Google relies heavily on this behavior internally. Code sanitizers that detect undefined behavior are able to notice use-after-free of globals, and might complain about this pattern. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225389447 -- 7b553a54bc6460cc7008b028552e66799475ca64 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225373389 -- fd0c722d217b3b509102274765ccb1a0b596cf46 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/time/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225246853 -- 9f8f3ba3b67a6d1ac4ecdc529c8b8eb0f02576d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Update absl/synchronisation/CMakeLists.txt to use new functions i.e. absl_cc_(library|test) PiperOrigin-RevId: 225237980 -- a3fdd67dad2e596f804f5e100c8d3a74d8064faa by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Internal cleanup PiperOrigin-RevId: 225226813 -- 48fab23fb8cdca45e95da14fce0de56614d09c25 by Jon Cohen <cohenjon@google.com>: Use a shim #define for wchar_t in msvc in int128. On ancient versions of msvc and with some compatibility flags on wchar_t is a typedef for unsigned short, whereas on standards-conforming versions wchar_t is a typedef for __wchar_t. The first situation causes int128 to not compile as you can't define both `operator wchar_t()` and `operator unsigned short()` because they are the same type. This CL introduces a wrapper #define in order to abstract over the different typedefs for wchar_t. We do a define instead of a typedef so that we can #undef at the end and not leak the symbol, since we need it in a header. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/dh8che7s(v=vs.140) has more detail about the underlying problem. PiperOrigin-RevId: 225223756 GitOrigin-RevId: 636137f6f0de910691a3950387fefacfa4909fb8 Change-Id: Iad94e52e9484c5acec115a2f09ef2d5ec22c2074
2018-12-13 19:30:03 +01:00
)