binutils-gdb/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h

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/* An optional object.
Copyright (C) 2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GDB.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#ifndef GDB_OPTIONAL_H
#define GDB_OPTIONAL_H
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
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#include "common/traits.h"
namespace gdb
{
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
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struct in_place_t
{
explicit in_place_t () = default;
};
constexpr gdb::in_place_t in_place {};
/* This class attempts to be a compatible subset of std::optional,
which is slated to be available in C++17. This class optionally
holds an object of some type -- by default it is constructed not
holding an object, but later the object can be "emplaced". This is
similar to using std::unique_ptr, but in-object allocation is
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
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guaranteed.
Unlike std::optional, we currently only support copy/move
construction/assignment of an optional<T> from either exactly
optional<T> or T. I.e., we don't support copy/move
construction/assignment from optional<U> or U, when U is a type
convertible to T. Making that work depending on the definitions of
T and U is somewhat complicated, and currently the users of this
class don't need it. */
template<typename T>
class optional
{
public:
Initialize gdb::optional empty payload to quiet false -Wmaybe-uninitialized warnings Commit ecfb656c37b982 ("dwarf2read.c: Make dir_index and file_name_index strong typedefs") added a use of gdb::optional that triggers bogus -Wmaybe-uninitialized warnings: GCC trunk is complaining like this: ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2read.c: In function void read_formatted_entries(bfd*, const gdb_byte**, line_header*, const comp_unit_head*, void (*)(line_header*, const char*, dir_index, unsigned int, unsigned int)): ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2read.c:17779:65: error: fe.file_entry::length may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized] callback (lh, fe.name, fe.d_index, fe.mod_time, fe.length); ^ ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2read.c:17779:65: error: *((void*)& fe +8) may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized] ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2read.c:17779:65: error: fe.file_entry::mod_time may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized] ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2read.c:17779:65: error: fe.file_entry::name may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized] While some older GCCs are complaining like this: ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2read.c: In function void read_formatted_entries(bfd*, const gdb_byte**, line_header*, const comp_unit_head*, void (*)(line_header*, const char*, dir_index, unsigned int, unsigned int)): ../../binutils-gdb/gdb/dwarf2read.c:17779:65: error: uint may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized] callback (lh, fe.name, fe.d_index, fe.mod_time, fe.length); Looking around the web, I see that boost's optional implementation triggers this kind of issue often too. See: http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_63_0/libs/optional/doc/html/boost_optional/tutorial/gotchas/false_positive_with__wmaybe_uninitialized.html I noticed that replacing the gdb::optional uses with real C++17 std::optional uses against GCC 7/trunk makes the warnings go away. Looking at the implementation, AFAICS, libstdc++ always initializes its "empty" union payload member (_M_empty, which is defined as an empty class, like ours). I.e., all payload types have this ctor: struct _Optional_payload..... { constexpr _Optional_payload() : _M_empty() {} The constexpr makes a diference too. Without it, GCC7 still warns. So I'm applying the same treatment to our gdb::optional. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h (optional::optional): Make constexpr and initialize m_dummy.
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constexpr optional ()
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
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: m_dummy ()
{}
template<typename... Args>
constexpr optional (in_place_t, Args &&... args)
: m_item (std::forward<Args> (args)...),
m_instantiated (true)
{}
~optional ()
{ this->reset (); }
/* Copy and move constructors. */
optional (const optional &other)
{
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
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if (other.m_instantiated)
this->emplace (other.get ());
}
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
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optional (optional &&other)
noexcept(std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<T> ())
{
if (other.m_instantiated)
this->emplace (std::move (other.get ()));
}
constexpr optional (const T &other)
: m_item (other),
m_instantiated (true)
{}
constexpr optional (T &&other)
noexcept (std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<T> ())
: m_item (std::move (other)),
m_instantiated (true)
{}
/* Assignment operators. */
optional &
operator= (const optional &other)
{
if (m_instantiated && other.m_instantiated)
this->get () = other.get ();
else
{
if (other.m_instantiated)
this->emplace (other.get ());
else
this->reset ();
}
return *this;
}
optional &
operator= (optional &&other)
noexcept (And<std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<T>,
std::is_nothrow_move_assignable<T>> ())
{
if (m_instantiated && other.m_instantiated)
this->get () = std::move (other.get ());
else
{
if (other.m_instantiated)
this->emplace (std::move (other.get ()));
else
this->reset ();
}
return *this;
}
optional &
operator= (const T &other)
{
if (m_instantiated)
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
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this->get () = other;
else
this->emplace (other);
return *this;
}
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
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optional &
operator= (T &&other)
noexcept (And<std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<T>,
std::is_nothrow_move_assignable<T>> ())
{
if (m_instantiated)
this->get () = std::move (other);
else
this->emplace (std::move (other));
return *this;
}
template<typename... Args>
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
2017-04-18 22:39:24 +02:00
T &emplace (Args &&... args)
{
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
2017-04-18 22:39:24 +02:00
this->reset ();
new (&m_item) T (std::forward<Args>(args)...);
m_instantiated = true;
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
2017-04-18 22:39:24 +02:00
return this->get ();
}
/* Observers. */
constexpr const T *operator-> () const
{ return std::addressof (this->get ()); }
T *operator-> ()
{ return std::addressof (this->get ()); }
constexpr const T &operator* () const &
{ return this->get (); }
T &operator* () &
{ return this->get (); }
T &&operator* () &&
{ return std::move (this->get ()); }
constexpr const T &&operator* () const &&
{ return std::move (this->get ()); }
constexpr explicit operator bool () const noexcept
{ return m_instantiated; }
constexpr bool has_value () const noexcept
{ return m_instantiated; }
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
2017-04-18 22:39:24 +02:00
/* 'reset' is a 'safe' operation with no precondition. */
void reset () noexcept
{
if (m_instantiated)
this->destroy ();
}
private:
/* Destroy the object. */
void destroy ()
{
gdb_assert (m_instantiated);
m_instantiated = false;
m_item.~T ();
}
/* The get operations have m_instantiated as a precondition. */
T &get () noexcept { return m_item; }
constexpr const T &get () const noexcept { return m_item; }
/* The object. */
union
{
struct { } m_dummy;
T m_item;
};
/* True if the object was ever emplaced. */
More gdb::optional features Currently we can't use gdb::optional<T> as function return type, because gdb::optional's copy ctor is deleted. For example, with: gdb::optional<int> function () { gdb::optional<int> opt; .... return opt; we get: src/gdb/foo.c: In function ‘gdb::optional<int> foo()’: src/gdb/foo.c:75:10: error: use of deleted function ‘gdb::optional<T>::optional(const gdb::optional<T>&) [with T = int]’ return opt; ^ In file included from src/gdb/foo.c:68:0: src/gdb/common/gdb_optional.h:53:3: note: declared here optional (const optional &other) = delete; ^ I started by fixing that, and then ran into another missing feature, also fixed by this patch. The next feature I'm missing most from gdb::optional<T> compared to std::optional<T> is construction/move/assignment from a T, instead of having to default construct an gdb::optional and then use optional::emplace(....). For example: gdb::optional<std::string> function () { gdb::optional<std::string> opt; std::string str; ... opt.emplace (std::move (str)); return opt; vs gdb::optional<std::string> function () { std::string str; ... return str; The copy/move ctor/assign methods weren't initialy implemented because std::optional supports construction from a type U if U is convertible to T too, and has rules to decide whether the ctors are explicit/implicit based on that, and rules for whether the ctor should be trivial or not, etc., which leads to a much more complicated implementation. If we stick to supporting copy/move construction/assignment of/to an optional<T> from exactly only optional<T> and T, then all that conversion-related complication disappears, and we still gain convenience in most use cases. The patch also makes emplace return a reference to the constructor object, per C++17 std::optional, and adds a reset method, againt because std::optional has one and it's trivial to support it. These two changes are a requirement of the gdb::optional unit testing patch that will follow. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-18 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * common/gdb_optional.h: Include common/traits.h. (in_place_t): New type. (in_place): New constexpr variable. (optional::optional): Remove member initialization of m_instantiated. (optional::optional(in_place_t...)): New constructor. (optional::~optional): Use reset. (optional::optional(const optional&)): New. (optional::optional(const optional&&)): New. (optional::optional(T &)): New. (optional::optional(T &&)): New. (operator::operator=(const optional &)): New. (operator::operator=(optional &&)): New. (operator::operator= (const T &)) (operator::operator= (T &&)) (operator::emplace (Args &&... args)): Return a T&. Use reset. (operator::reset): New. (operator::m_instantiated):: Add in-class initializer. * common/traits.h: Include <type_traits>. (struct And): New types.
2017-04-18 22:39:24 +02:00
bool m_instantiated = false;
};
}
#endif /* GDB_OPTIONAL_H */