diff --git a/libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog b/libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog
index 058efef85b3..6d616d2391f 100644
--- a/libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog
+++ b/libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog
@@ -1,3 +1,13 @@
+2008-02-11 Benjamin Kosnik
+
+ * doc/doxygen/mainpage.html: Add in corrected links.
+ * README: Edit, move most into...
+ * doc/xml/manual/appendix_contributing.xml (Directory Layout): ...here.
+ (Documentation Style): Revise.
+ * doc/xml/spine.xml: Edit file names.
+ * doc/Makefile.am: Edit xml_sources.
+ * doc/Makefile.in: Regenerate.
+
2008-02-11 Paolo Carlini
* configure: Regenerate with documented autoconf and automake
diff --git a/libstdc++-v3/README b/libstdc++-v3/README
index 1064095fba7..2651ec48170 100644
--- a/libstdc++-v3/README
+++ b/libstdc++-v3/README
@@ -1,96 +1,6 @@
file: libstdc++-v3/README
New users may wish to point their web browsers to the file
-documentation.html in the 'docs/html' subdirectory. It contains brief
+index.html in the 'doc/html' subdirectory. It contains brief
building instructions and notes on how to configure the library in
interesting ways.
-
-Instructions for configuring and building appear in
-docs/html/install.html.
-
-This directory contains the files needed to create an ISO Standard C++
-Library.
-
-It has subdirectories:
-
- docs
- Files in HTML and text format that document usage, quirks of the
- implementation, and contributor checklists.
-
- include
- All header files for the C++ library are within this directory,
- modulo specific runtime-related files that are in the libsupc++
- directory.
-
- include/std
- Files meant to be found by #include directives in
- standard-conforming user programs.
-
- include/c
- Headers intended to directly include standard C headers.
- [NB: this can be enabled via --enable-cheaders=c]
-
- include/c_std
- Headers intended to include standard C headers, and put select
- names into the std:: namespace.
- [NB: this is the default, and is the same as --enable-cheaders=c_std]
-
- include/bits
- Files included by standard headers and by other files in
- the bits directory.
-
- include/backward
- Headers provided for backward compatibility, such as .
- They are not used in this library.
-
- include/ext
- Headers that define extensions to the standard library. No
- standard header refers to any of them.
-
- scripts
- Scripts that are used during the configure, build, make, or test
- process.
-
- src
- Files that are used in constructing the library, but are not
- installed.
-
- testsuites/[backward, demangle, ext, performance, thread, 17_* to 27_*]
- Test programs are here, and may be used to begin to exercise the
- library. Support for "make check" and "make check-install" is
- complete, and runs through all the subdirectories here when this
- command is issued from the build directory. Please note that
- "make check" requires DejaGNU 1.4 or later to be installed. Please
- note that "make check-script" calls the script mkcheck, which
- requires bash, and which may need the paths to bash adjusted to
- work properly, as /bin/bash is assumed.
-
-Other subdirectories contain variant versions of certain files
-that are meant to be copied or linked by the configure script.
-Currently these are:
-
- config/abi
- config/cpu
- config/io
- config/locale
- config/os
-
-In addition, two subdirectories are convenience libraries:
-
- libmath
- Support routines needed for C++ math. Only needed if the
- underlying "C" implementation is non-existent, in particular
- required or optimal long double, long long, and C99 functionality.
-
- libsupc++
- Contains the runtime library for C++, including exception
- handling and memory allocation and deallocation, RTTI, terminate
- handlers, etc.
-
-Note that glibc also has a bits/ subdirectory. We will either
-need to be careful not to collide with names in its bits/
-directory; or rename bits to (e.g.) cppbits/.
-
-In files throughout the system, lines marked with an "XXX" indicate
-a bug or incompletely-implemented feature. Lines marked "XXX MT"
-indicate a place that may require attention for multi-thread safety.
diff --git a/libstdc++-v3/doc/Makefile.am b/libstdc++-v3/doc/Makefile.am
index 926ceec70a8..8f500088cb8 100644
--- a/libstdc++-v3/doc/Makefile.am
+++ b/libstdc++-v3/doc/Makefile.am
@@ -73,7 +73,6 @@ xml_srcdir = ${glibcxx_srcdir}/doc/xml
xml_sources = \
${xml_srcdir}/spine.xml \
${xml_srcdir}/authors.xml \
- ${xml_srcdir}/manual/spine.xml \
${xml_srcdir}/manual/abi.xml \
${xml_srcdir}/manual/algorithms.xml \
${xml_srcdir}/manual/allocator.xml \
@@ -186,7 +185,7 @@ doc-fo: $(xml_sources) ${glibcxx_builddir}/doc/fo
# PDF
# Points to current best xml to PDF generation process.
-doc-pdf: doc-pdf-xmlto
+doc-pdf: doc-pdf-prince
# PDF 1
# fop
diff --git a/libstdc++-v3/doc/Makefile.in b/libstdc++-v3/doc/Makefile.in
index 7bbf68c92db..b40e51059af 100644
--- a/libstdc++-v3/doc/Makefile.in
+++ b/libstdc++-v3/doc/Makefile.in
@@ -294,7 +294,6 @@ xml_srcdir = ${glibcxx_srcdir}/doc/xml
xml_sources = \
${xml_srcdir}/spine.xml \
${xml_srcdir}/authors.xml \
- ${xml_srcdir}/manual/spine.xml \
${xml_srcdir}/manual/abi.xml \
${xml_srcdir}/manual/algorithms.xml \
${xml_srcdir}/manual/allocator.xml \
@@ -617,7 +616,7 @@ doc-fo: $(xml_sources) ${glibcxx_builddir}/doc/fo
# PDF
# Points to current best xml to PDF generation process.
-doc-pdf: doc-pdf-xmlto
+doc-pdf: doc-pdf-prince
doc-pdf-fop-xml: $(xml_sources) ${glibcxx_builddir}/doc/pdf
@echo "Generating pdf fop files from xml..."
$(FOP) $(FOP_FLAGS) -xml ${top_srcdir}/doc/xml/spine.xml \
diff --git a/libstdc++-v3/doc/doxygen/mainpage.html b/libstdc++-v3/doc/doxygen/mainpage.html
index 941e7a8855f..2302436992b 100644
--- a/libstdc++-v3/doc/doxygen/mainpage.html
+++ b/libstdc++-v3/doc/doxygen/mainpage.html
@@ -28,9 +28,9 @@
Generated on @DATE@.
There are two types of documentation for libstdc++. One is the
- distribution documentation, which can be read online at
- http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/documentation.html
- or offline from doc/html/documentation.html in the library source
+ distribution documentation, which can be read online
+ here
+ or offline from the file doc/html/index.html in the library source
directory.
@@ -64,13 +64,15 @@
Generating the documentation
-
These HTML pages are automatically generated, along with the man pages.
- See doc/doxygen/guide.html in the source tree for how to
- create (and write) the pages.
+
These HTML pages are automatically generated, along with the man
+ pages. See the section "Documentation Style"
+ in doc/xml/manual/appendix_contributing.xml in the
+ source tree for how to create (and write) the doxygen markup.
+ This style guide can also be viewed on the web.
License, Copyright, and Other Lawyerly Verbosity
The libstdc++ documentation is released under
-
+
these terms.
Part of the generated documentation involved comments and notes from
diff --git a/libstdc++-v3/doc/xml/manual/appendix_contributing.xml b/libstdc++-v3/doc/xml/manual/appendix_contributing.xml
index 033bd7dbbef..543296a8d5d 100644
--- a/libstdc++-v3/doc/xml/manual/appendix_contributing.xml
+++ b/libstdc++-v3/doc/xml/manual/appendix_contributing.xml
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
-
+
@@ -32,699 +32,853 @@
Reading
-
- Get and read the relevant sections of the C++ language
-specification. Copies of the full ISO 14882 standard are available on
-line via the ISO mirror site for committee members. Non-members, or
-those who have not paid for the privilege of sitting on the committee
-and sustained their two meeting commitment for voting rights, may get
-a copy of the standard from their respective national standards
-organization. In the USA, this national standards organization is ANSI
-and their web-site is right
+
+
+
+ Get and read the relevant sections of the C++ language
+ specification. Copies of the full ISO 14882 standard are
+ available on line via the ISO mirror site for committee
+ members. Non-members, or those who have not paid for the
+ privilege of sitting on the committee and sustained their
+ two meeting commitment for voting rights, may get a copy of
+ the standard from their respective national standards
+ organization. In the USA, this national standards
+ organization is ANSI and their web-site is right
+ here.
+ (And if you've already registered with them, clicking this link will take you to directly to the place where you can
+ buy the standard on-line.)
+
+
- here.
-(And if you've already registered with them, clicking this link will take you to directly to the place where you can
-buy the standard on-line.)
-
+
+
+ The library working group bugs, and known defects, can
+ be obtained here:
+ http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21
+
+
- The library working group bugs, and known defects, can be obtained here:
- http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21
-
-
- The newsgroup dedicated to standardization issues is comp.std.c++: this FAQ for this group is quite useful and can be found here .
-
-
- Peruse the GNU Coding Standards, and chuckle when you hit the part about "Using Languages Other Than C."
-
-
- Be familiar with the extensions that preceded these general GNU rules. These style issues for libstdc++ can be found in the file C++STYLE, located in the root level of the distribution, or here.
-
-
- And last but certainly not least, read the library-specific information found here.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Assignment
-
-Small changes can be accepted without a copyright assignment form on
-file. New code and additions to the library need completed copyright
-assignment form on file at the FSF. Note: your employer may be required
-to fill out appropriate disclaimer forms as well.
-
-
-
- Historically, the libstdc++ assignment form added the following
- question:
-
-
-
-
- Which Belgian comic book character is better, Tintin or Asterix, and
- why?
-
-
-
-
-While not strictly necessary, humoring the maintainers and answering
-this question would be appreciated.
-
-
-
-For more information about getting a copyright assignment, please see
-Legal
-Matters.
-
-
-
-Please contact Benjamin Kosnik at
-bkoz+assign@redhat.com if you are confused
-about the assignment or have general licensing questions. When
-requesting an assignment form from
-mailto:assign@gnu.org, please cc the libstdc++
-maintainer above so that progress can be monitored.
-
-
-
-
- Getting Sources
-
- Getting write access
- (look for "Write after approval")
+
+
+ The newsgroup dedicated to standardization issues is
+ comp.std.c++: this FAQ for this group is quite useful and
+ can be
+ found
+ here .
-
+
-
- Submitting Patches
+
+
+ Peruse
+ the GNU
+ Coding Standards, and chuckle when you hit the part
+ about Using Languages Other Than C.
+
+
+
+
+ Be familiar with the extensions that preceded these
+ general GNU rules. These style issues for libstdc++ can be
+ found here.
+
+
-
-Every patch must have several pieces of information before it can be
-properly evaluated. Ideally (and to ensure the fastest possible
-response from the maintainers) it would have all of these pieces:
-
+
+
+ And last but certainly not least, read the
+ library-specific information
+ found here.
+
+
+
-
-
- A description of the bug and how your patch fixes this bug. For
- new features a description of the feature and your implementation.
-
- A ChangeLog entry as plain text; see the various ChangeLog files
- for format and content. If using you are using emacs as your editor,
- simply position the insertion point at the beginning of your change
- and hit CX-4a to bring up the appropriate ChangeLog
- entry. See--magic! Similar functionality also exists for vi.
-
- A testsuite submission or sample program that will easily and
- simply show the existing error or test new functionality.
-
- The patch itself. If you are accessing the SVN repository
- use "svn update; svn diff NEW"; else, use "diff -cp OLD NEW"
- ... If your version of diff does not support these options, then
- get the latest version of GNU diff. The SVN Tricks wiki page
- has information on customising the output of svn diff.
-
- When you have all these pieces, bundle them up in a mail message
-and send it to libstdc++@gcc.gnu.org. All patches and related
-discussion should be sent to the libstdc++ mailing list.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Coding Style
+
+
+ Assignment
+ Small changes can be accepted without a copyright assignment form on
+ file. New code and additions to the library need completed copyright
+ assignment form on file at the FSF. Note: your employer may be required
+ to fill out appropriate disclaimer forms as well.
-
- Bad Itentifiers
-
-Identifiers that conflict and should be avoided.
-
-
+
+ Historically, the libstdc++ assignment form added the following
+ question:
+
-This is the list of names "reserved to the implementation" that
-have been claimed by certain compilers and system headers of interest,
-and should not be used in the library. It will grow, of course.
-We generally are interested in names that are not all-caps, except
-for those like "_T"
+
+
+ Which Belgian comic book character is better, Tintin or Asterix, and
+ why?
+
+
-For Solarix:
-_B
-_C
-_L
-_N
-_P
-_S
-_U
-_X
-_E1
-..
-_E24
+
+ While not strictly necessary, humoring the maintainers and answering
+ this question would be appreciated.
+
-Irix adds:
-_A
-_G
+
+ For more information about getting a copyright assignment, please see
+ Legal
+ Matters.
+
-MS adds:
-_T
+
+ Please contact Benjamin Kosnik at
+ bkoz+assign@redhat.com if you are confused
+ about the assignment or have general licensing questions. When
+ requesting an assignment form from
+ mailto:assign@gnu.org, please cc the libstdc++
+ maintainer above so that progress can be monitored.
+
+
-BSD adds:
-__used
-__unused
-__inline
-_Complex
-__istype
-__maskrune
-__tolower
-__toupper
-__wchar_t
-__wint_t
-_res
-_res_ext
-__tg_*
+
+ Getting Sources
+
+ Getting write access
+ (look for "Write after approval")
+
+
-For GCC:
+
+ Submitting Patches
- [Note that this list is out of date. It applies to the old
- name-mangling; in G++ 3.0 and higher a different name-mangling is
- used. In addition, many of the bugs relating to G++ interpreting
- these names as operators have been fixed.]
+
+ Every patch must have several pieces of information before it can be
+ properly evaluated. Ideally (and to ensure the fastest possible
+ response from the maintainers) it would have all of these pieces:
+
- The full set of __* identifiers (combined from gcc/cp/lex.c and
- gcc/cplus-dem.c) that are either old or new, but are definitely
- recognized by the demangler, is:
+
+
+
+ A description of the bug and how your patch fixes this
+ bug. For new features a description of the feature and your
+ implementation.
+
+
-__aa
-__aad
-__ad
-__addr
-__adv
-__aer
-__als
-__alshift
-__amd
-__ami
-__aml
-__amu
-__aor
-__apl
-__array
-__ars
-__arshift
-__as
-__bit_and
-__bit_ior
-__bit_not
-__bit_xor
-__call
-__cl
-__cm
-__cn
-__co
-__component
-__compound
-__cond
-__convert
-__delete
-__dl
-__dv
-__eq
-__er
-__ge
-__gt
-__indirect
-__le
-__ls
-__lt
-__max
-__md
-__method_call
-__mi
-__min
-__minus
-__ml
-__mm
-__mn
-__mult
-__mx
-__ne
-__negate
-__new
-__nop
-__nt
-__nw
-__oo
-__op
-__or
-__pl
-__plus
-__postdecrement
-__postincrement
-__pp
-__pt
-__rf
-__rm
-__rs
-__sz
-__trunc_div
-__trunc_mod
-__truth_andif
-__truth_not
-__truth_orif
-__vc
-__vd
-__vn
+
+
+ A ChangeLog entry as plain text; see the various
+ ChangeLog files for format and content. If using you are
+ using emacs as your editor, simply position the insertion
+ point at the beginning of your change and hit CX-4a to bring
+ up the appropriate ChangeLog entry. See--magic! Similar
+ functionality also exists for vi.
+
+
-SGI badnames:
-__builtin_alloca
-__builtin_fsqrt
-__builtin_sqrt
-__builtin_fabs
-__builtin_dabs
-__builtin_cast_f2i
-__builtin_cast_i2f
-__builtin_cast_d2ll
-__builtin_cast_ll2d
-__builtin_copy_dhi2i
-__builtin_copy_i2dhi
-__builtin_copy_dlo2i
-__builtin_copy_i2dlo
-__add_and_fetch
-__sub_and_fetch
-__or_and_fetch
-__xor_and_fetch
-__and_and_fetch
-__nand_and_fetch
-__mpy_and_fetch
-__min_and_fetch
-__max_and_fetch
-__fetch_and_add
-__fetch_and_sub
-__fetch_and_or
-__fetch_and_xor
-__fetch_and_and
-__fetch_and_nand
-__fetch_and_mpy
-__fetch_and_min
-__fetch_and_max
-__lock_test_and_set
-__lock_release
-__lock_acquire
-__compare_and_swap
-__synchronize
-__high_multiply
-__unix
-__sgi
-__linux__
-__i386__
-__i486__
-__cplusplus
-__embedded_cplusplus
-// long double conversion members mangled as __opr
-// http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/libstdc++/1999-q4/msg00060.html
-_opr
-
-
+
+
+ A testsuite submission or sample program that will
+ easily and simply show the existing error or test new
+ functionality.
+
+
-
- By Example
-
+
+
+ The patch itself. If you are accessing the SVN
+ repository use svn update; svn diff NEW;
+ else, use diff -cp OLD NEW ... If your
+ version of diff does not support these options, then get the
+ latest version of GNU
+ diff. The SVN
+ Tricks wiki page has information on customising the
+ output of svn diff.
+
+
-This library is written to appropriate C++ coding standards. As such,
-it is intended to precede the recommendations of the GNU Coding
-Standard, which can be referenced in full here:
+
+
+ When you have all these pieces, bundle them up in a
+ mail message and send it to libstdc++@gcc.gnu.org. All
+ patches and related discussion should be sent to the
+ libstdc++ mailing list.
+
+
+
-http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/standards.html#Formatting
+
-The rest of this is also interesting reading, but skip the "Design
-Advice" part.
+
-The GCC coding conventions are here, and are also useful:
-http://gcc.gnu.org/codingconventions.html
-
-In addition, because it doesn't seem to be stated explicitly anywhere
-else, there is an 80 column source limit.
-
-ChangeLog entries for member functions should use the
-classname::member function name syntax as follows:
-
-1999-04-15 Dennis Ritchie <dr@att.com>
-
- * src/basic_file.cc (__basic_file::open): Fix thinko in
- _G_HAVE_IO_FILE_OPEN bits.
-
-Notable areas of divergence from what may be previous local practice
-(particularly for GNU C) include:
-
-01. Pointers and references
- char* p = "flop";
- char& c = *p;
- -NOT-
- char *p = "flop"; // wrong
- char &c = *p; // wrong
+
+ Directory Layout and Source Conventions
- Reason: In C++, definitions are mixed with executable code. Here,
- p is being initialized, not *p. This is near-universal
- practice among C++ programmers; it is normal for C hackers
- to switch spontaneously as they gain experience.
+
+ The unpacked source directory of libstdc++ contains the files
+ needed to create the GNU C++ Library.
+
-02. Operator names and parentheses
- operator==(type)
- -NOT-
- operator == (type) // wrong
-
- Reason: The == is part of the function name. Separating
- it makes the declaration look like an expression.
+
+It has subdirectories:
-03. Function names and parentheses
- void mangle()
- -NOT-
- void mangle () // wrong
+ doc
+ Files in HTML and text format that document usage, quirks of the
+ implementation, and contributor checklists.
- Reason: no space before parentheses (except after a control-flow
- keyword) is near-universal practice for C++. It identifies the
- parentheses as the function-call operator or declarator, as
- opposed to an expression or other overloaded use of parentheses.
+ include
+ All header files for the C++ library are within this directory,
+ modulo specific runtime-related files that are in the libsupc++
+ directory.
-04. Template function indentation
- template<typename T>
- void
- template_function(args)
- { }
+ include/std
+ Files meant to be found by #include <name> directives in
+ standard-conforming user programs.
+
+ include/c
+ Headers intended to directly include standard C headers.
+ [NB: this can be enabled via --enable-cheaders=c]
+
+ include/c_global
+ Headers intended to include standard C headers in
+ the global namespace, and put select names into the std::
+ namespace. [NB: this is the default, and is the same as
+ --enable-cheaders=c_global]
+
+ include/c_std
+ Headers intended to include standard C headers
+ already in namespace std, and put select names into the std::
+ namespace. [NB: this is the same as --enable-cheaders=c_std]
+
+ include/bits
+ Files included by standard headers and by other files in
+ the bits directory.
+
+ include/backward
+ Headers provided for backward compatibility, such as <iostream.h>.
+ They are not used in this library.
+
+ include/ext
+ Headers that define extensions to the standard library. No
+ standard header refers to any of them.
+
+ scripts
+ Scripts that are used during the configure, build, make, or test
+ process.
+
+ src
+ Files that are used in constructing the library, but are not
+ installed.
+
+ testsuites/[backward, demangle, ext, performance, thread, 17_* to 27_*]
+ Test programs are here, and may be used to begin to exercise the
+ library. Support for "make check" and "make check-install" is
+ complete, and runs through all the subdirectories here when this
+ command is issued from the build directory. Please note that
+ "make check" requires DejaGNU 1.4 or later to be installed. Please
+ note that "make check-script" calls the script mkcheck, which
+ requires bash, and which may need the paths to bash adjusted to
+ work properly, as /bin/bash is assumed.
+
+Other subdirectories contain variant versions of certain files
+that are meant to be copied or linked by the configure script.
+Currently these are:
+
+ config/abi
+ config/cpu
+ config/io
+ config/locale
+ config/os
+
+In addition, two subdirectories are convenience libraries:
+
+ libmath
+ Support routines needed for C++ math. Only needed if the
+ underlying "C" implementation is non-existent, in particular
+ required or optimal long double, long long, and C99 functionality.
+
+ libsupc++
+ Contains the runtime library for C++, including exception
+ handling and memory allocation and deallocation, RTTI, terminate
+ handlers, etc.
+
+Note that glibc also has a bits/ subdirectory. We will either
+need to be careful not to collide with names in its bits/
+directory; or rename bits to (e.g.) cppbits/.
+
+In files throughout the system, lines marked with an "XXX" indicate
+a bug or incompletely-implemented feature. Lines marked "XXX MT"
+indicate a place that may require attention for multi-thread safety.
+
+
+
+
+
+ Coding Style
+
+
+
+ Bad Itentifiers
+
+ Identifiers that conflict and should be avoided.
+
+
+
+ This is the list of names reserved to the
+ implementation that have been claimed by certain
+ compilers and system headers of interest, and should not be used
+ in the library. It will grow, of course. We generally are
+ interested in names that are not all-caps, except for those like
+ "_T"
+
+ For Solaris:
+ _B
+ _C
+ _L
+ _N
+ _P
+ _S
+ _U
+ _X
+ _E1
+ ..
+ _E24
+
+ Irix adds:
+ _A
+ _G
+
+ MS adds:
+ _T
+
+ BSD adds:
+ __used
+ __unused
+ __inline
+ _Complex
+ __istype
+ __maskrune
+ __tolower
+ __toupper
+ __wchar_t
+ __wint_t
+ _res
+ _res_ext
+ __tg_*
+
+ For GCC:
+
+ [Note that this list is out of date. It applies to the old
+ name-mangling; in G++ 3.0 and higher a different name-mangling is
+ used. In addition, many of the bugs relating to G++ interpreting
+ these names as operators have been fixed.]
+
+ The full set of __* identifiers (combined from gcc/cp/lex.c and
+ gcc/cplus-dem.c) that are either old or new, but are definitely
+ recognized by the demangler, is:
+
+ __aa
+ __aad
+ __ad
+ __addr
+ __adv
+ __aer
+ __als
+ __alshift
+ __amd
+ __ami
+ __aml
+ __amu
+ __aor
+ __apl
+ __array
+ __ars
+ __arshift
+ __as
+ __bit_and
+ __bit_ior
+ __bit_not
+ __bit_xor
+ __call
+ __cl
+ __cm
+ __cn
+ __co
+ __component
+ __compound
+ __cond
+ __convert
+ __delete
+ __dl
+ __dv
+ __eq
+ __er
+ __ge
+ __gt
+ __indirect
+ __le
+ __ls
+ __lt
+ __max
+ __md
+ __method_call
+ __mi
+ __min
+ __minus
+ __ml
+ __mm
+ __mn
+ __mult
+ __mx
+ __ne
+ __negate
+ __new
+ __nop
+ __nt
+ __nw
+ __oo
+ __op
+ __or
+ __pl
+ __plus
+ __postdecrement
+ __postincrement
+ __pp
+ __pt
+ __rf
+ __rm
+ __rs
+ __sz
+ __trunc_div
+ __trunc_mod
+ __truth_andif
+ __truth_not
+ __truth_orif
+ __vc
+ __vd
+ __vn
+
+ SGI badnames:
+ __builtin_alloca
+ __builtin_fsqrt
+ __builtin_sqrt
+ __builtin_fabs
+ __builtin_dabs
+ __builtin_cast_f2i
+ __builtin_cast_i2f
+ __builtin_cast_d2ll
+ __builtin_cast_ll2d
+ __builtin_copy_dhi2i
+ __builtin_copy_i2dhi
+ __builtin_copy_dlo2i
+ __builtin_copy_i2dlo
+ __add_and_fetch
+ __sub_and_fetch
+ __or_and_fetch
+ __xor_and_fetch
+ __and_and_fetch
+ __nand_and_fetch
+ __mpy_and_fetch
+ __min_and_fetch
+ __max_and_fetch
+ __fetch_and_add
+ __fetch_and_sub
+ __fetch_and_or
+ __fetch_and_xor
+ __fetch_and_and
+ __fetch_and_nand
+ __fetch_and_mpy
+ __fetch_and_min
+ __fetch_and_max
+ __lock_test_and_set
+ __lock_release
+ __lock_acquire
+ __compare_and_swap
+ __synchronize
+ __high_multiply
+ __unix
+ __sgi
+ __linux__
+ __i386__
+ __i486__
+ __cplusplus
+ __embedded_cplusplus
+ // long double conversion members mangled as __opr
+ // http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/libstdc++/1999-q4/msg00060.html
+ _opr
+
+
+
+
+ By Example
+
+ This library is written to appropriate C++ coding standards. As such,
+ it is intended to precede the recommendations of the GNU Coding
+ Standard, which can be referenced in full here:
+
+ http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/standards.html#Formatting
+
+ The rest of this is also interesting reading, but skip the "Design
+ Advice" part.
+
+ The GCC coding conventions are here, and are also useful:
+ http://gcc.gnu.org/codingconventions.html
+
+ In addition, because it doesn't seem to be stated explicitly anywhere
+ else, there is an 80 column source limit.
+
+ ChangeLog entries for member functions should use the
+ classname::member function name syntax as follows:
+
+ 1999-04-15 Dennis Ritchie <dr@att.com>
+
+ * src/basic_file.cc (__basic_file::open): Fix thinko in
+ _G_HAVE_IO_FILE_OPEN bits.
+
+ Notable areas of divergence from what may be previous local practice
+ (particularly for GNU C) include:
+
+ 01. Pointers and references
+ char* p = "flop";
+ char& c = *p;
-NOT-
- template<class T>
- void template_function(args) {};
-
- Reason: In class definitions, without indentation whitespace is
- needed both above and below the declaration to distinguish
- it visually from other members. (Also, re: "typename"
- rather than "class".) T often could be int, which is
- not a class. ("class", here, is an anachronism.)
+ char *p = "flop"; // wrong
+ char &c = *p; // wrong
+
+ Reason: In C++, definitions are mixed with executable code. Here,
+ p is being initialized, not *p. This is near-universal
+ practice among C++ programmers; it is normal for C hackers
+ to switch spontaneously as they gain experience.
-05. Template class indentation
- template<typename _CharT, typename _Traits>
- class basic_ios : public ios_base
- {
- public:
+ 02. Operator names and parentheses
+ operator==(type)
+ -NOT-
+ operator == (type) // wrong
+
+ Reason: The == is part of the function name. Separating
+ it makes the declaration look like an expression.
+
+ 03. Function names and parentheses
+ void mangle()
+ -NOT-
+ void mangle () // wrong
+
+ Reason: no space before parentheses (except after a control-flow
+ keyword) is near-universal practice for C++. It identifies the
+ parentheses as the function-call operator or declarator, as
+ opposed to an expression or other overloaded use of parentheses.
+
+ 04. Template function indentation
+ template<typename T>
+ void
+ template_function(args)
+ { }
+ -NOT-
+ template<class T>
+ void template_function(args) {};
+
+ Reason: In class definitions, without indentation whitespace is
+ needed both above and below the declaration to distinguish
+ it visually from other members. (Also, re: "typename"
+ rather than "class".) T often could be int, which is
+ not a class. ("class", here, is an anachronism.)
+
+ 05. Template class indentation
+ template<typename _CharT, typename _Traits>
+ class basic_ios : public ios_base
+ {
+ public:
// Types:
- };
- -NOT-
- template<class _CharT, class _Traits>
- class basic_ios : public ios_base
- {
- public:
+ };
+ -NOT-
+ template<class _CharT, class _Traits>
+ class basic_ios : public ios_base
+ {
+ public:
// Types:
- };
- -NOT-
- template<class _CharT, class _Traits>
- class basic_ios : public ios_base
- {
- public:
+ };
+ -NOT-
+ template<class _CharT, class _Traits>
+ class basic_ios : public ios_base
+ {
+ public:
// Types:
- };
+ };
-06. Enumerators
- enum
- {
- space = _ISspace,
- print = _ISprint,
- cntrl = _IScntrl
- };
- -NOT-
- enum { space = _ISspace, print = _ISprint, cntrl = _IScntrl };
+ 06. Enumerators
+ enum
+ {
+ space = _ISspace,
+ print = _ISprint,
+ cntrl = _IScntrl
+ };
+ -NOT-
+ enum { space = _ISspace, print = _ISprint, cntrl = _IScntrl };
-07. Member initialization lists
- All one line, separate from class name.
+ 07. Member initialization lists
+ All one line, separate from class name.
- gribble::gribble()
- : _M_private_data(0), _M_more_stuff(0), _M_helper(0);
- { }
- -NOT-
- gribble::gribble() : _M_private_data(0), _M_more_stuff(0), _M_helper(0);
- { }
+ gribble::gribble()
+ : _M_private_data(0), _M_more_stuff(0), _M_helper(0);
+ { }
+ -NOT-
+ gribble::gribble() : _M_private_data(0), _M_more_stuff(0), _M_helper(0);
+ { }
-08. Try/Catch blocks
- try
- {
+ 08. Try/Catch blocks
+ try
+ {
//
- }
- catch (...)
- {
+ }
+ catch (...)
+ {
//
- }
- -NOT-
- try {
- //
- } catch(...) {
- //
- }
+ }
+ -NOT-
+ try {
+ //
+ } catch(...) {
+ //
+ }
-09. Member functions declarations and definitions
- Keywords such as extern, static, export, explicit, inline, etc
- go on the line above the function name. Thus
+ 09. Member functions declarations and definitions
+ Keywords such as extern, static, export, explicit, inline, etc
+ go on the line above the function name. Thus
- virtual int
- foo()
- -NOT-
- virtual int foo()
+ virtual int
+ foo()
+ -NOT-
+ virtual int foo()
- Reason: GNU coding conventions dictate return types for functions
- are on a separate line than the function name and parameter list
- for definitions. For C++, where we have member functions that can
- be either inline definitions or declarations, keeping to this
- standard allows all member function names for a given class to be
- aligned to the same margin, increasing readibility.
+ Reason: GNU coding conventions dictate return types for functions
+ are on a separate line than the function name and parameter list
+ for definitions. For C++, where we have member functions that can
+ be either inline definitions or declarations, keeping to this
+ standard allows all member function names for a given class to be
+ aligned to the same margin, increasing readibility.
-10. Invocation of member functions with "this->"
- For non-uglified names, use this->name to call the function.
+ 10. Invocation of member functions with "this->"
+ For non-uglified names, use this->name to call the function.
- this->sync()
- -NOT-
- sync()
+ this->sync()
+ -NOT-
+ sync()
- Reason: Koenig lookup.
+ Reason: Koenig lookup.
-11. Namespaces
- namespace std
- {
- blah blah blah;
- } // namespace std
+ 11. Namespaces
+ namespace std
+ {
+ blah blah blah;
+ } // namespace std
- -NOT-
+ -NOT-
- namespace std {
- blah blah blah;
- } // namespace std
+ namespace std {
+ blah blah blah;
+ } // namespace std
-12. Spacing under protected and private in class declarations:
- space above, none below
- ie
+ 12. Spacing under protected and private in class declarations:
+ space above, none below
+ ie
- public:
- int foo;
+ public:
+ int foo;
- -NOT-
- public:
-
- int foo;
+ -NOT-
+ public:
+
+ int foo;
-13. Spacing WRT return statements.
- no extra spacing before returns, no parenthesis
- ie
+ 13. Spacing WRT return statements.
+ no extra spacing before returns, no parenthesis
+ ie
- }
- return __ret;
+ }
+ return __ret;
- -NOT-
- }
+ -NOT-
+ }
- return __ret;
+ return __ret;
- -NOT-
+ -NOT-
- }
- return (__ret);
+ }
+ return (__ret);
-14. Location of global variables.
- All global variables of class type, whether in the "user visable"
- space (e.g., cin) or the implementation namespace, must be defined
- as a character array with the appropriate alignment and then later
- re-initialized to the correct value.
+ 14. Location of global variables.
+ All global variables of class type, whether in the "user visable"
+ space (e.g., cin) or the implementation namespace, must be defined
+ as a character array with the appropriate alignment and then later
+ re-initialized to the correct value.
- This is due to startup issues on certain platforms, such as AIX.
- For more explanation and examples, see src/globals.cc. All such
- variables should be contained in that file, for simplicity.
+ This is due to startup issues on certain platforms, such as AIX.
+ For more explanation and examples, see src/globals.cc. All such
+ variables should be contained in that file, for simplicity.
-15. Exception abstractions
- Use the exception abstractions found in functexcept.h, which allow
- C++ programmers to use this library with -fno-exceptions. (Even if
- that is rarely advisable, it's a necessary evil for backwards
- compatibility.)
+ 15. Exception abstractions
+ Use the exception abstractions found in functexcept.h, which allow
+ C++ programmers to use this library with -fno-exceptions. (Even if
+ that is rarely advisable, it's a necessary evil for backwards
+ compatibility.)
-16. Exception error messages
- All start with the name of the function where the exception is
- thrown, and then (optional) descriptive text is added. Example:
+ 16. Exception error messages
+ All start with the name of the function where the exception is
+ thrown, and then (optional) descriptive text is added. Example:
- __throw_logic_error(__N("basic_string::_S_construct NULL not valid"));
+ __throw_logic_error(__N("basic_string::_S_construct NULL not valid"));
- Reason: The verbose terminate handler prints out exception::what(),
- as well as the typeinfo for the thrown exception. As this is the
- default terminate handler, by putting location info into the
- exception string, a very useful error message is printed out for
- uncaught exceptions. So useful, in fact, that non-programmers can
- give useful error messages, and programmers can intelligently
- speculate what went wrong without even using a debugger.
+ Reason: The verbose terminate handler prints out exception::what(),
+ as well as the typeinfo for the thrown exception. As this is the
+ default terminate handler, by putting location info into the
+ exception string, a very useful error message is printed out for
+ uncaught exceptions. So useful, in fact, that non-programmers can
+ give useful error messages, and programmers can intelligently
+ speculate what went wrong without even using a debugger.
-17. The doxygen style guide to comments is a separate document,
- see index.
+ 17. The doxygen style guide to comments is a separate document,
+ see index.
-The library currently has a mixture of GNU-C and modern C++ coding
-styles. The GNU C usages will be combed out gradually.
+ The library currently has a mixture of GNU-C and modern C++ coding
+ styles. The GNU C usages will be combed out gradually.
-Name patterns:
+ Name patterns:
-For nonstandard names appearing in Standard headers, we are constrained
-to use names that begin with underscores. This is called "uglification".
-The convention is:
+ For nonstandard names appearing in Standard headers, we are constrained
+ to use names that begin with underscores. This is called "uglification".
+ The convention is:
- Local and argument names: __[a-z].*
+ Local and argument names: __[a-z].*
- Examples: __count __ix __s1
+ Examples: __count __ix __s1
- Type names and template formal-argument names: _[A-Z][^_].*
+ Type names and template formal-argument names: _[A-Z][^_].*
- Examples: _Helper _CharT _N
+ Examples: _Helper _CharT _N
- Member data and function names: _M_.*
+ Member data and function names: _M_.*
- Examples: _M_num_elements _M_initialize ()
+ Examples: _M_num_elements _M_initialize ()
- Static data members, constants, and enumerations: _S_.*
+ Static data members, constants, and enumerations: _S_.*
- Examples: _S_max_elements _S_default_value
+ Examples: _S_max_elements _S_default_value
-Don't use names in the same scope that differ only in the prefix,
-e.g. _S_top and _M_top. See BADNAMES for a list of forbidden names.
-(The most tempting of these seem to be and "_T" and "__sz".)
+ Don't use names in the same scope that differ only in the prefix,
+ e.g. _S_top and _M_top. See BADNAMES for a list of forbidden names.
+ (The most tempting of these seem to be and "_T" and "__sz".)
-Names must never have "__" internally; it would confuse name
-unmanglers on some targets. Also, never use "__[0-9]", same reason.
+ Names must never have "__" internally; it would confuse name
+ unmanglers on some targets. Also, never use "__[0-9]", same reason.
---------------------------
+ --------------------------
-[BY EXAMPLE]
-
-#ifndef _HEADER_
-#define _HEADER_ 1
+ [BY EXAMPLE]
+
+ #ifndef _HEADER_
+ #define _HEADER_ 1
-namespace std
-{
- class gribble
- {
- public:
- gribble() throw();
+ namespace std
+ {
+ class gribble
+ {
+ public:
+ gribble() throw();
- gribble(const gribble&);
+ gribble(const gribble&);
- explicit
- gribble(int __howmany);
+ explicit
+ gribble(int __howmany);
- gribble&
- operator=(const gribble&);
+ gribble&
+ operator=(const gribble&);
- virtual
- ~gribble() throw ();
+ virtual
+ ~gribble() throw ();
- // Start with a capital letter, end with a period.
- inline void
- public_member(const char* __arg) const;
+ // Start with a capital letter, end with a period.
+ inline void
+ public_member(const char* __arg) const;
- // In-class function definitions should be restricted to one-liners.
- int
- one_line() { return 0 }
+ // In-class function definitions should be restricted to one-liners.
+ int
+ one_line() { return 0 }
- int
- two_lines(const char* arg)
- { return strchr(arg, 'a'); }
+ int
+ two_lines(const char* arg)
+ { return strchr(arg, 'a'); }
- inline int
- three_lines(); // inline, but defined below.
+ inline int
+ three_lines(); // inline, but defined below.
- // Note indentation.
- template<typename _Formal_argument>
+ // Note indentation.
+ template<typename _Formal_argument>
void
public_template() const throw();
- template<typename _Iterator>
+ template<typename _Iterator>
void
other_template();
- private:
- class _Helper;
+ private:
+ class _Helper;
- int _M_private_data;
- int _M_more_stuff;
- _Helper* _M_helper;
- int _M_private_function();
+ int _M_private_data;
+ int _M_more_stuff;
+ _Helper* _M_helper;
+ int _M_private_function();
- enum _Enum
+ enum _Enum
{
- _S_one,
- _S_two
+ _S_one,
+ _S_two
};
- static void
- _S_initialize_library();
- };
+ static void
+ _S_initialize_library();
+ };
-// More-or-less-standard language features described by lack, not presence.
-# ifndef _G_NO_LONGLONG
- extern long long _G_global_with_a_good_long_name; // avoid globals!
-# endif
+ // More-or-less-standard language features described by lack, not presence.
+ # ifndef _G_NO_LONGLONG
+ extern long long _G_global_with_a_good_long_name; // avoid globals!
+ # endif
- // Avoid in-class inline definitions, define separately;
- // likewise for member class definitions:
- inline int
- gribble::public_member() const
- { int __local = 0; return __local; }
+ // Avoid in-class inline definitions, define separately;
+ // likewise for member class definitions:
+ inline int
+ gribble::public_member() const
+ { int __local = 0; return __local; }
- class gribble::_Helper
- {
- int _M_stuff;
+ class gribble::_Helper
+ {
+ int _M_stuff;
- friend class gribble;
- };
-}
+ friend class gribble;
+ };
+ }
-// Names beginning with "__": only for arguments and
-// local variables; never use "__" in a type name, or
-// within any name; never use "__[0-9]".
+ // Names beginning with "__": only for arguments and
+ // local variables; never use "__" in a type name, or
+ // within any name; never use "__[0-9]".
-#endif /* _HEADER_ */
+ #endif /* _HEADER_ */
-namespace std
-{
- template<typename T> // notice: "typename", not "class", no space
- long_return_value_type<with_many, args>
- function_name(char* pointer, // "char *pointer" is wrong.
- char* argument,
- const Reference& ref)
- {
+ namespace std
+ {
+ template<typename T> // notice: "typename", not "class", no space
+ long_return_value_type<with_many, args>
+ function_name(char* pointer, // "char *pointer" is wrong.
+ char* argument,
+ const Reference& ref)
+ {
// int a_local; /* wrong; see below. */
if (test)
{
- nested code
+ nested code
}
-
+
int a_local = 0; // declare variable at first use.
// char a, b, *p; /* wrong */
@@ -734,1114 +888,1259 @@ namespace std
// except maybe here...
for (unsigned i = 0, mask = 1; mask; ++i, mask <<= 1) {
- // ...
+ // ...
}
- }
-
- gribble::gribble()
- : _M_private_data(0), _M_more_stuff(0), _M_helper(0);
- { }
+ }
+
+ gribble::gribble()
+ : _M_private_data(0), _M_more_stuff(0), _M_helper(0);
+ { }
- inline int
- gribble::three_lines()
- {
- // doesn't fit in one line.
- }
-} // namespace std
+ inline int
+ gribble::three_lines()
+ {
+ // doesn't fit in one line.
+ }
+ } // namespace std
+
+
+
+
+ Documentation Style
+
+ Doxygen
+
+ Prerequisites
+
+ Prerequisite tools are Bash 2.x,
+ Doxygen, and
+ the GNU
+ coreutils. (GNU versions of find, xargs, and possibly
+ sed and grep are used, just because the GNU versions make
+ things very easy.)
+
-
-
-
+
+ To generate the pretty pictures and hierarchy
+ graphs, the
+ Graphviz
+ package will need to be installed.
+
+
-
- Documentation Style
-
-
-
- Doxygen
-
+ Generating the Doxygen Files
+
+ The Makefile rules
+
+ make doc-html-doxygen
+
+ and
+
+ make doc-xml-doxygen
+
+ and
+
+ make doc-man-doxygen
+
+ in the libstdc++ build directory generate the HTML docs, the
+ XML docs, and the man pages.
+
-The Makefile rules 'make doc-doxygen-html',
- and 'make doc-doxygen-man' in the libstdc++ build
- directory generate the HTML docs, the and the man pages,
- respectively. Prerequisite tools are Bash 2.x,
- Doxygen, a working version of g++ somewhere in the PATH, and
- the GNU coreutils.
+
+ Careful observers will see that the Makefile rules simply call
+ a script from the source tree, run_doxygen, which
+ does the actual work of running Doxygen and then (most
+ importantly) massaging the output files. If for some reason
+ you prefer to not go through the Makefile, you can call this
+ script directly. (Start by passing --help.)
+
- In addition, to generate the pretty pictures and hierarchy graphs, the
- Graphviz
- package will need to be installed.
- (g++ is used to build a program which manipulates man pages. GNU versions
- of find, xargs, and possibly sed and grep are used, just because the GNU
- versions make things very easy.)
-
-
-Careful observers will see that the Makefile rules simply call a script
- from the source tree, run_doxygen, which does the actual work
- of running Doxygen and then (most importantly) massaging the output files.
- If for some reason you prefer to not go through the Makefile, you can call
- this script directly. (Start by passing '--help'.)
-
-
-If you wish to tweak the Doxygen settings, do so by editing
- docs/doxygen/user.cfg.in. Notes to v3-hackers are written in
- triple-# comments.
-
+
+ If you wish to tweak the Doxygen settings, do so by editing
+ doc/doxygen/user.cfg.in. Notes to fellow
+ library hackers are written in triple-# comments.
+ Markup
-In general, libstdc++ files should be formatted according to the GNU
- C++ Coding Standard rules found in the file
- C++STYLE.
- Before any doxygen-specific formatting tweaks are made, please try to make
- sure that the initial formatting is sound.
-
+
+ In general, libstdc++ files should be formatted according to
+ the rules found in the
+ Coding Standard. Before
+ any doxygen-specific formatting tweaks are made, please try to
+ make sure that the initial formatting is sound.
+
-Adding Doxygen markup to a file (informally called "doxygenating") is very
- simple. The Doxygen manual can be found
- here.
- We try to use a very-recent version of Doxygen.
-
+
+ Adding Doxygen markup to a file (informally called
+ doxygenating) is very simple. The Doxygen manual can be
+ found
+ here.
+ We try to use a very-recent version of Doxygen.
+
-For classes, use deque/vector/list and std::pair as examples. For
- functions, see their member functions, and the free functions in
- stl_algobase.h. Member functions of other container-like
- types should read similarly to these member functions.
-
+
+ For classes, use
+ deque/vector/list
+ and std::pair as examples. For
+ functions, see their member functions, and the free functions
+ in stl_algobase.h. Member functions of
+ other container-like types should read similarly to these
+ member functions.
+
-These points accompany the first list in section 3.1 of the Doxygen manual:
-
-
- Use the Javadoc style...
- ...not the Qt style. The intermediate *'s are preferred.
- Use the triple-slash style only for one-line comments (the "brief" mode).
- Very recent versions of Doxygen permit full-mode comments in triple-slash
- blocks, but the formatting still comes out wonky.
- This is disgusting. Don't do this.
-
+
+ These points accompany the first list in section 3.1 of the
+ Doxygen manual:
+
-Use the @-style of commands, not the !-style. Please be careful about
- whitespace in your markup comments. Most of the time it doesn't matter;
- doxygen absorbs most whitespace, and both HTML and *roff are agnostic about
- whitespace. However, in <pre> blocks and @code/@endcode sections,
- spacing can have "interesting" effects.
-
+
+ Use the Javadoc style...
+
+
+ ...not the Qt style. The intermediate *'s are preferred.
+
+
+
+
+ Use the triple-slash style only for one-line comments (the
+ brief mode). Very recent versions of Doxygen permit
+ full-mode comments in triple-slash blocks, but the
+ formatting still comes out wonky.
+
+
+
+
+ This is disgusting. Don't do this.
+
+
+
-Use either kind of grouping, as appropriate. doxygroups.cc
- exists for this purpose. See stl_iterator.h for a good
- example of the "other" kind of grouping.
-
+
+ Use the @-style of commands, not the !-style. Please be
+ careful about whitespace in your markup comments. Most of the
+ time it doesn't matter; doxygen absorbs most whitespace, and
+ both HTML and *roff are agnostic about whitespace. However,
+ in <pre> blocks and @code/@endcode sections, spacing can
+ have interesting effects.
+
-Please use markup tags like @p and @a when referring to things such as the
- names of function parameters. Use @e for emphasis when necessary. Use @c
- to refer to other standard names. (Examples of all these abound in the
- present code.)
-
+
+ Use either kind of grouping, as
+ appropriate. doxygroups.cc exists for this
+ purpose. See stl_iterator.h for a good example
+ of the other kind of grouping.
+
+
+
+ Please use markup tags like @p and @a when referring to things
+ such as the names of function parameters. Use @e for emphasis
+ when necessary. Use @c to refer to other standard names.
+ (Examples of all these abound in the present code.)
+
-
+
-
- Docbook
+
+ Docbook
-
-
-Which files are important:
+
+ Prerequisites
+
+ Editing the DocBook sources requires an XML editor. Many
+ exist: some noteable options
+ include emacs, Kate,
+ or Conglomerate.
+
-Main page
-spine.xml - index to documentation set
+
+ Some editors support special XML Validation
+ modes that can validate the file as it is
+ produced. Recommended is the nXML Mode
+ for emacs.
+
-manual/spine.xml - index to manual
-manual/*.xml - chapters and sections of the manual
+
+ Besides an editor, additional DocBook files and XML tools are
+ also required.
+
-faq.xml - index to FAQ
-api.xml - index to source level / API
+
+ Access to the DocBook stylesheets and DTD is required. The
+ stylesheets are usually packaged by vendor, in something
+ like docbook-style-xsl. The installation
+ directory for this package corresponds to
+ the XSL_STYLE_DIR
+ in doc/Makefile.am and defaults
+ to /usr/share/sgml/docbook/xsl-stylesheets.
+
-All *.txml files are template xml files, ie otherwise empty files with
-the correct structure, suitable for filling in.
+
+ For procesessing XML, an XML processor and some style
+ sheets are necessary. Defaults are xsltproc
+ provided by libxslt.
+
+
+
+ For validating the XML document, you'll need
+ something like xmllint and access to the
+ DocBook DTD. These are provided
+ by a vendor package like lixml2.
+
+
+
+ For PDF output, something that transforms valid XML to PDF is
+ required. Possible solutions include xmlto,
+ Apache
+ FOP, or prince. Other options are
+ listed on the DocBook web pages. Please
+ consult the libstdc++@gcc.gnu.org list when
+ preparing printed manuals for current best practice and suggestions.
+
+
+
+ Make sure that the XML documentation and markup is valid for
+ any change. This can be done easily, with the validation rules
+ in the Makefile, which is equivalent to doing:
+
+
+
+
+xmllint --noout --valid xml/index.xml
+
+
+
+
+
+ Generating the DocBook Files
+
+
+ The Makefile rules
+
+ make doc-html
+
+ and
+
+ make doc-pdf
+
+ and
+
+ make doc-xml-single
+
+ and
+
+ make doc-xml-validate
+
+
+ in the libstdc++ build directory result respectively in the
+ following: the generation of an HTML version of all the
+ documentation, a PDF version of the same, a single XML
+ document, and the results of validating the XML document.
+
+
+
+
+ File Organization and Basics
+
+
+ Which files are important
+
+ All Docbook files are in the directory
+ libstdc++-v3/doc/xml
+
+ Inside this directory, the files of importance:
+ spine.xml - index to documentation set
+ manual/spine.xml - index to manual
+ manual/*.xml - individual chapters and sections of the manual
+ faq.xml - index to FAQ
+ api.xml - index to source level / API
+
+ All *.txml files are template xml files, ie otherwise empty files with
+ the correct structure, suitable for filling in with new information.
+
+ Cannonical Writing Style
+
+ class template
+ function template
+ member function template
+ (via C++ Templates, Vandevoorde)
+
+ class in namespace std: allocator, not std::allocator
+
+ header file: iostream, not <iostream>
-Cannonical Writing Style
+ General structure
-class template
-function template
-member function template
-(via C++ Templates, Vandevoorde)
+ <set>
+ <book>
+ </book>
-class in namespace std: allocator, not std::allocator
-
-header file: iostream, not <iostream>
-
-
-Translation
-
-HTML to XML rough equivalents
-
-<p> <para>
-
-<pre> <computeroutput>
-<pre> <programlisting>
-<pre> <literallayout>
-
-<ul> <itemizedlist>
-<ol> <orderedlist>
-<il> <listitem>
-
-<dl> <variablelist>
-
- <varlistentry>
-<dt> <term>
-</dt> </term>
-<dd> <listitem>
-</dt> </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
-<a href <ulink url
-<code> <literal>
-<code> <programlisting>
-
-<strong> <emphasis>
-<em> <emphasis>
-" <quote>
-
-ctype.h <filename class="headerfile"></filename>
-
-
-build_dir <filename class="directory">path_to_build_dir</filename>
-
-Finer gradations of <code>
-
-<classname> <classname>string</classname>
- <classname>vector<></classname>
- <function>fs.clear()</function>
-
-<structname>
-
-<function> <function>clear()</function>
-
-<type> <type>long long</type>
-
-<varname> <varname>fs</varname>
-
-<literal> <literal>-Weffc++</literal>
- <literal>rel_ops</literal>
-
-<constant> <constant>_GNU_SOURCE</constant>
- <constant>3.0</constant>
-
-<filename>
-
-<command> <command>g++</command>
-
-<errortext> <errortext>foo Concept </errortext>
-
-
-General structure
-
-<set>
- <book>
- </book>
-
- <book>
- <chapter>
- </chapter>
- </book>
-
-
- <book>
- <part>
+ <book>
<chapter>
- <section>
- </section>
+ </chapter>
+ </book>
- <sect1>
- </sect1>
+ <book>
+ <part>
+ <chapter>
+ <section>
+ </section>
- <sect1>
- <sect2>
- </sect2>
- </sect1>
+ <sect1>
+ </sect1>
+
+ <sect1>
+ <sect2>
+ </sect2>
+ </sect1>
</chapter>
<chapter>
</chapter>
- </part>
- </book>
+ </part>
+ </book>
+ </set>
+
+
-</set>
+
+ Markup By Example
+
+ HTML to XML rough equivalents
+
+ <p> <para>
+
+ <pre> <computeroutput>
+ <pre> <programlisting>
+ <pre> <literallayout>
+
+ <ul> <itemizedlist>
+ <ol> <orderedlist>
+ <il> <listitem>
+
+ <dl> <variablelist>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <dt> <term>
+ </dt> </term>
+ <dd> <listitem>
+ </dt> </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <a href <ulink url
+ <code> <literal>
+ <code> <programlisting>
+
+ <strong> <emphasis>
+ <em> <emphasis>
+ " <quote>
+
+ ctype.h <filename class="headerfile"></filename>
+
+
+ build_dir <filename class="directory">path_to_build_dir</filename>
+
+ Finer gradations of <code>
+
+ <classname> <classname>string</classname>
+ <classname>vector<></classname>
+ <function>fs.clear()</function>
+
+ <structname>
+
+ <function> <function>clear()</function>
+
+ <type> <type>long long</type>
+
+ <varname> <varname>fs</varname>
+
+ <literal> <literal>-Weffc++</literal>
+ <literal>rel_ops</literal>
+
+ <constant> <constant>_GNU_SOURCE</constant>
+ <constant>3.0</constant>
+
+ <filename>
+
+ <command> <command>g++</command>
+
+ <errortext> <errortext>foo Concept </errortext>
-
+
+
-
+
-
- Design Notes
-
-
+
+ Design Notes
+
+
-
+
-The Library
------------
+ The Library
+ -----------
-This paper is covers two major areas:
+ This paper is covers two major areas:
- - Features and policies not mentioned in the standard that
- the quality of the library implementation depends on, including
- extensions and "implementation-defined" features;
+ - Features and policies not mentioned in the standard that
+ the quality of the library implementation depends on, including
+ extensions and "implementation-defined" features;
- - Plans for required but unimplemented library features and
- optimizations to them.
+ - Plans for required but unimplemented library features and
+ optimizations to them.
-Overhead
---------
+ Overhead
+ --------
-The standard defines a large library, much larger than the standard
-C library. A naive implementation would suffer substantial overhead
-in compile time, executable size, and speed, rendering it unusable
-in many (particularly embedded) applications. The alternative demands
-care in construction, and some compiler support, but there is no
-need for library subsets.
+ The standard defines a large library, much larger than the standard
+ C library. A naive implementation would suffer substantial overhead
+ in compile time, executable size, and speed, rendering it unusable
+ in many (particularly embedded) applications. The alternative demands
+ care in construction, and some compiler support, but there is no
+ need for library subsets.
-What are the sources of this overhead? There are four main causes:
+ What are the sources of this overhead? There are four main causes:
- - The library is specified almost entirely as templates, which
- with current compilers must be included in-line, resulting in
- very slow builds as tens or hundreds of thousands of lines
- of function definitions are read for each user source file.
- Indeed, the entire SGI STL, as well as the dos Reis valarray,
- are provided purely as header files, largely for simplicity in
- porting. Iostream/locale is (or will be) as large again.
+ - The library is specified almost entirely as templates, which
+ with current compilers must be included in-line, resulting in
+ very slow builds as tens or hundreds of thousands of lines
+ of function definitions are read for each user source file.
+ Indeed, the entire SGI STL, as well as the dos Reis valarray,
+ are provided purely as header files, largely for simplicity in
+ porting. Iostream/locale is (or will be) as large again.
- - The library is very flexible, specifying a multitude of hooks
- where users can insert their own code in place of defaults.
- When these hooks are not used, any time and code expended to
- support that flexibility is wasted.
+ - The library is very flexible, specifying a multitude of hooks
+ where users can insert their own code in place of defaults.
+ When these hooks are not used, any time and code expended to
+ support that flexibility is wasted.
- - Templates are often described as causing to "code bloat". In
- practice, this refers (when it refers to anything real) to several
- independent processes. First, when a class template is manually
- instantiated in its entirely, current compilers place the definitions
- for all members in a single object file, so that a program linking
- to one member gets definitions of all. Second, template functions
- which do not actually depend on the template argument are, under
- current compilers, generated anew for each instantiation, rather
- than being shared with other instantiations. Third, some of the
- flexibility mentioned above comes from virtual functions (both in
- regular classes and template classes) which current linkers add
- to the executable file even when they manifestly cannot be called.
+ - Templates are often described as causing to "code bloat". In
+ practice, this refers (when it refers to anything real) to several
+ independent processes. First, when a class template is manually
+ instantiated in its entirely, current compilers place the definitions
+ for all members in a single object file, so that a program linking
+ to one member gets definitions of all. Second, template functions
+ which do not actually depend on the template argument are, under
+ current compilers, generated anew for each instantiation, rather
+ than being shared with other instantiations. Third, some of the
+ flexibility mentioned above comes from virtual functions (both in
+ regular classes and template classes) which current linkers add
+ to the executable file even when they manifestly cannot be called.
- - The library is specified to use a language feature, exceptions,
- which in the current gcc compiler ABI imposes a run time and
- code space cost to handle the possibility of exceptions even when
- they are not used. Under the new ABI (accessed with -fnew-abi),
- there is a space overhead and a small reduction in code efficiency
- resulting from lost optimization opportunities associated with
- non-local branches associated with exceptions.
+ - The library is specified to use a language feature, exceptions,
+ which in the current gcc compiler ABI imposes a run time and
+ code space cost to handle the possibility of exceptions even when
+ they are not used. Under the new ABI (accessed with -fnew-abi),
+ there is a space overhead and a small reduction in code efficiency
+ resulting from lost optimization opportunities associated with
+ non-local branches associated with exceptions.
-What can be done to eliminate this overhead? A variety of coding
-techniques, and compiler, linker and library improvements and
-extensions may be used, as covered below. Most are not difficult,
-and some are already implemented in varying degrees.
+ What can be done to eliminate this overhead? A variety of coding
+ techniques, and compiler, linker and library improvements and
+ extensions may be used, as covered below. Most are not difficult,
+ and some are already implemented in varying degrees.
-Overhead: Compilation Time
---------------------------
+ Overhead: Compilation Time
+ --------------------------
-Providing "ready-instantiated" template code in object code archives
-allows us to avoid generating and optimizing template instantiations
-in each compilation unit which uses them. However, the number of such
-instantiations that are useful to provide is limited, and anyway this
-is not enough, by itself, to minimize compilation time. In particular,
-it does not reduce time spent parsing conforming headers.
+ Providing "ready-instantiated" template code in object code archives
+ allows us to avoid generating and optimizing template instantiations
+ in each compilation unit which uses them. However, the number of such
+ instantiations that are useful to provide is limited, and anyway this
+ is not enough, by itself, to minimize compilation time. In particular,
+ it does not reduce time spent parsing conforming headers.
-Quicker header parsing will depend on library extensions and compiler
-improvements. One approach is some variation on the techniques
-previously marketed as "pre-compiled headers", now standardized as
-support for the "export" keyword. "Exported" template definitions
-can be placed (once) in a "repository" -- really just a library, but
-of template definitions rather than object code -- to be drawn upon
-at link time when an instantiation is needed, rather than placed in
-header files to be parsed along with every compilation unit.
+ Quicker header parsing will depend on library extensions and compiler
+ improvements. One approach is some variation on the techniques
+ previously marketed as "pre-compiled headers", now standardized as
+ support for the "export" keyword. "Exported" template definitions
+ can be placed (once) in a "repository" -- really just a library, but
+ of template definitions rather than object code -- to be drawn upon
+ at link time when an instantiation is needed, rather than placed in
+ header files to be parsed along with every compilation unit.
-Until "export" is implemented we can put some of the lengthy template
-definitions in #if guards or alternative headers so that users can skip
-over the the full definitions when they need only the ready-instantiated
-specializations.
+ Until "export" is implemented we can put some of the lengthy template
+ definitions in #if guards or alternative headers so that users can skip
+ over the full definitions when they need only the ready-instantiated
+ specializations.
-To be precise, this means that certain headers which define
-templates which users normally use only for certain arguments
-can be instrumented to avoid exposing the template definitions
-to the compiler unless a macro is defined. For example, in
-<string>, we might have:
+ To be precise, this means that certain headers which define
+ templates which users normally use only for certain arguments
+ can be instrumented to avoid exposing the template definitions
+ to the compiler unless a macro is defined. For example, in
+ <string>, we might have:
- template <class _CharT, ... > class basic_string {
- ... // member declarations
- };
- ... // operator declarations
+ template <class _CharT, ... > class basic_string {
+ ... // member declarations
+ };
+ ... // operator declarations
- #ifdef _STRICT_ISO_
- # if _G_NO_TEMPLATE_EXPORT
- # include <bits/std_locale.h> // headers needed by definitions
- # ...
- # include <bits/string.tcc> // member and global template definitions.
- # endif
- #endif
+ #ifdef _STRICT_ISO_
+ # if _G_NO_TEMPLATE_EXPORT
+ # include <bits/std_locale.h> // headers needed by definitions
+ # ...
+ # include <bits/string.tcc> // member and global template definitions.
+ # endif
+ #endif
-Users who compile without specifying a strict-ISO-conforming flag
-would not see many of the template definitions they now see, and rely
-instead on ready-instantiated specializations in the library. This
-technique would be useful for the following substantial components:
-string, locale/iostreams, valarray. It would *not* be useful or
-usable with the following: containers, algorithms, iterators,
-allocator. Since these constitute a large (though decreasing)
-fraction of the library, the benefit the technique offers is
-limited.
+ Users who compile without specifying a strict-ISO-conforming flag
+ would not see many of the template definitions they now see, and rely
+ instead on ready-instantiated specializations in the library. This
+ technique would be useful for the following substantial components:
+ string, locale/iostreams, valarray. It would *not* be useful or
+ usable with the following: containers, algorithms, iterators,
+ allocator. Since these constitute a large (though decreasing)
+ fraction of the library, the benefit the technique offers is
+ limited.
-The language specifies the semantics of the "export" keyword, but
-the gcc compiler does not yet support it. When it does, problems
-with large template inclusions can largely disappear, given some
-minor library reorganization, along with the need for the apparatus
-described above.
+ The language specifies the semantics of the "export" keyword, but
+ the gcc compiler does not yet support it. When it does, problems
+ with large template inclusions can largely disappear, given some
+ minor library reorganization, along with the need for the apparatus
+ described above.
-Overhead: Flexibility Cost
---------------------------
+ Overhead: Flexibility Cost
+ --------------------------
-The library offers many places where users can specify operations
-to be performed by the library in place of defaults. Sometimes
-this seems to require that the library use a more-roundabout, and
-possibly slower, way to accomplish the default requirements than
-would be used otherwise.
+ The library offers many places where users can specify operations
+ to be performed by the library in place of defaults. Sometimes
+ this seems to require that the library use a more-roundabout, and
+ possibly slower, way to accomplish the default requirements than
+ would be used otherwise.
-The primary protection against this overhead is thorough compiler
-optimization, to crush out layers of inline function interfaces.
-Kuck & Associates has demonstrated the practicality of this kind
-of optimization.
+ The primary protection against this overhead is thorough compiler
+ optimization, to crush out layers of inline function interfaces.
+ Kuck & Associates has demonstrated the practicality of this kind
+ of optimization.
-The second line of defense against this overhead is explicit
-specialization. By defining helper function templates, and writing
-specialized code for the default case, overhead can be eliminated
-for that case without sacrificing flexibility. This takes full
-advantage of any ability of the optimizer to crush out degenerate
-code.
+ The second line of defense against this overhead is explicit
+ specialization. By defining helper function templates, and writing
+ specialized code for the default case, overhead can be eliminated
+ for that case without sacrificing flexibility. This takes full
+ advantage of any ability of the optimizer to crush out degenerate
+ code.
-The library specifies many virtual functions which current linkers
-load even when they cannot be called. Some minor improvements to the
-compiler and to ld would eliminate any such overhead by simply
-omitting virtual functions that the complete program does not call.
-A prototype of this work has already been done. For targets where
-GNU ld is not used, a "pre-linker" could do the same job.
+ The library specifies many virtual functions which current linkers
+ load even when they cannot be called. Some minor improvements to the
+ compiler and to ld would eliminate any such overhead by simply
+ omitting virtual functions that the complete program does not call.
+ A prototype of this work has already been done. For targets where
+ GNU ld is not used, a "pre-linker" could do the same job.
-The main areas in the standard interface where user flexibility
-can result in overhead are:
+ The main areas in the standard interface where user flexibility
+ can result in overhead are:
- - Allocators: Containers are specified to use user-definable
- allocator types and objects, making tuning for the container
- characteristics tricky.
+ - Allocators: Containers are specified to use user-definable
+ allocator types and objects, making tuning for the container
+ characteristics tricky.
- - Locales: the standard specifies locale objects used to implement
- iostream operations, involving many virtual functions which use
- streambuf iterators.
+ - Locales: the standard specifies locale objects used to implement
+ iostream operations, involving many virtual functions which use
+ streambuf iterators.
- - Algorithms and containers: these may be instantiated on any type,
- frequently duplicating code for identical operations.
+ - Algorithms and containers: these may be instantiated on any type,
+ frequently duplicating code for identical operations.
- - Iostreams and strings: users are permitted to use these on their
- own types, and specify the operations the stream must use on these
- types.
+ - Iostreams and strings: users are permitted to use these on their
+ own types, and specify the operations the stream must use on these
+ types.
-Note that these sources of overhead are _avoidable_. The techniques
-to avoid them are covered below.
+ Note that these sources of overhead are _avoidable_. The techniques
+ to avoid them are covered below.
-Code Bloat
-----------
+ Code Bloat
+ ----------
-In the SGI STL, and in some other headers, many of the templates
-are defined "inline" -- either explicitly or by their placement
-in class definitions -- which should not be inline. This is a
-source of code bloat. Matt had remarked that he was relying on
-the compiler to recognize what was too big to benefit from inlining,
-and generate it out-of-line automatically. However, this also can
-result in code bloat except where the linker can eliminate the extra
-copies.
+ In the SGI STL, and in some other headers, many of the templates
+ are defined "inline" -- either explicitly or by their placement
+ in class definitions -- which should not be inline. This is a
+ source of code bloat. Matt had remarked that he was relying on
+ the compiler to recognize what was too big to benefit from inlining,
+ and generate it out-of-line automatically. However, this also can
+ result in code bloat except where the linker can eliminate the extra
+ copies.
-Fixing these cases will require an audit of all inline functions
-defined in the library to determine which merit inlining, and moving
-the rest out of line. This is an issue mainly in chapters 23, 25, and
-27. Of course it can be done incrementally, and we should generally
-accept patches that move large functions out of line and into ".tcc"
-files, which can later be pulled into a repository. Compiler/linker
-improvements to recognize very large inline functions and move them
-out-of-line, but shared among compilation units, could make this
-work unnecessary.
+ Fixing these cases will require an audit of all inline functions
+ defined in the library to determine which merit inlining, and moving
+ the rest out of line. This is an issue mainly in chapters 23, 25, and
+ 27. Of course it can be done incrementally, and we should generally
+ accept patches that move large functions out of line and into ".tcc"
+ files, which can later be pulled into a repository. Compiler/linker
+ improvements to recognize very large inline functions and move them
+ out-of-line, but shared among compilation units, could make this
+ work unnecessary.
-Pre-instantiating template specializations currently produces large
-amounts of dead code which bloats statically linked programs. The
-current state of the static library, libstdc++.a, is intolerable on
-this account, and will fuel further confused speculation about a need
-for a library "subset". A compiler improvement that treats each
-instantiated function as a separate object file, for linking purposes,
-would be one solution to this problem. An alternative would be to
-split up the manual instantiation files into dozens upon dozens of
-little files, each compiled separately, but an abortive attempt at
-this was done for <string> and, though it is far from complete, it
-is already a nuisance. A better interim solution (just until we have
-"export") is badly needed.
+ Pre-instantiating template specializations currently produces large
+ amounts of dead code which bloats statically linked programs. The
+ current state of the static library, libstdc++.a, is intolerable on
+ this account, and will fuel further confused speculation about a need
+ for a library "subset". A compiler improvement that treats each
+ instantiated function as a separate object file, for linking purposes,
+ would be one solution to this problem. An alternative would be to
+ split up the manual instantiation files into dozens upon dozens of
+ little files, each compiled separately, but an abortive attempt at
+ this was done for <string> and, though it is far from complete, it
+ is already a nuisance. A better interim solution (just until we have
+ "export") is badly needed.
-When building a shared library, the current compiler/linker cannot
-automatically generate the instantiatiations needed. This creates a
-miserable situation; it means any time something is changed in the
-library, before a shared library can be built someone must manually
-copy the declarations of all templates that are needed by other parts
-of the library to an "instantiation" file, and add it to the build
-system to be compiled and linked to the library. This process is
-readily automated, and should be automated as soon as possible.
-Users building their own shared libraries experience identical
-frustrations.
+ When building a shared library, the current compiler/linker cannot
+ automatically generate the instantiatiations needed. This creates a
+ miserable situation; it means any time something is changed in the
+ library, before a shared library can be built someone must manually
+ copy the declarations of all templates that are needed by other parts
+ of the library to an "instantiation" file, and add it to the build
+ system to be compiled and linked to the library. This process is
+ readily automated, and should be automated as soon as possible.
+ Users building their own shared libraries experience identical
+ frustrations.
-Sharing common aspects of template definitions among instantiations
-can radically reduce code bloat. The compiler could help a great
-deal here by recognizing when a function depends on nothing about
-a template parameter, or only on its size, and giving the resulting
-function a link-name "equate" that allows it to be shared with other
-instantiations. Implementation code could take advantage of the
-capability by factoring out code that does not depend on the template
-argument into separate functions to be merged by the compiler.
+ Sharing common aspects of template definitions among instantiations
+ can radically reduce code bloat. The compiler could help a great
+ deal here by recognizing when a function depends on nothing about
+ a template parameter, or only on its size, and giving the resulting
+ function a link-name "equate" that allows it to be shared with other
+ instantiations. Implementation code could take advantage of the
+ capability by factoring out code that does not depend on the template
+ argument into separate functions to be merged by the compiler.
-Until such a compiler optimization is implemented, much can be done
-manually (if tediously) in this direction. One such optimization is
-to derive class templates from non-template classes, and move as much
-implementation as possible into the base class. Another is to partial-
-specialize certain common instantiations, such as vector<T*>, to share
-code for instantiations on all types T. While these techniques work,
-they are far from the complete solution that a compiler improvement
-would afford.
+ Until such a compiler optimization is implemented, much can be done
+ manually (if tediously) in this direction. One such optimization is
+ to derive class templates from non-template classes, and move as much
+ implementation as possible into the base class. Another is to partial-
+ specialize certain common instantiations, such as vector<T*>, to share
+ code for instantiations on all types T. While these techniques work,
+ they are far from the complete solution that a compiler improvement
+ would afford.
-Overhead: Expensive Language Features
--------------------------------------
+ Overhead: Expensive Language Features
+ -------------------------------------
-The main "expensive" language feature used in the standard library
-is exception support, which requires compiling in cleanup code with
-static table data to locate it, and linking in library code to use
-the table. For small embedded programs the amount of such library
-code and table data is assumed by some to be excessive. Under the
-"new" ABI this perception is generally exaggerated, although in some
-cases it may actually be excessive.
+ The main "expensive" language feature used in the standard library
+ is exception support, which requires compiling in cleanup code with
+ static table data to locate it, and linking in library code to use
+ the table. For small embedded programs the amount of such library
+ code and table data is assumed by some to be excessive. Under the
+ "new" ABI this perception is generally exaggerated, although in some
+ cases it may actually be excessive.
-To implement a library which does not use exceptions directly is
-not difficult given minor compiler support (to "turn off" exceptions
-and ignore exception constructs), and results in no great library
-maintenance difficulties. To be precise, given "-fno-exceptions",
-the compiler should treat "try" blocks as ordinary blocks, and
-"catch" blocks as dead code to ignore or eliminate. Compiler
-support is not strictly necessary, except in the case of "function
-try blocks"; otherwise the following macros almost suffice:
+ To implement a library which does not use exceptions directly is
+ not difficult given minor compiler support (to "turn off" exceptions
+ and ignore exception constructs), and results in no great library
+ maintenance difficulties. To be precise, given "-fno-exceptions",
+ the compiler should treat "try" blocks as ordinary blocks, and
+ "catch" blocks as dead code to ignore or eliminate. Compiler
+ support is not strictly necessary, except in the case of "function
+ try blocks"; otherwise the following macros almost suffice:
- #define throw(X)
- #define try if (true)
- #define catch(X) else if (false)
+ #define throw(X)
+ #define try if (true)
+ #define catch(X) else if (false)
-However, there may be a need to use function try blocks in the
-library implementation, and use of macros in this way can make
-correct diagnostics impossible. Furthermore, use of this scheme
-would require the library to call a function to re-throw exceptions
-from a try block. Implementing the above semantics in the compiler
-is preferable.
+ However, there may be a need to use function try blocks in the
+ library implementation, and use of macros in this way can make
+ correct diagnostics impossible. Furthermore, use of this scheme
+ would require the library to call a function to re-throw exceptions
+ from a try block. Implementing the above semantics in the compiler
+ is preferable.
-Given the support above (however implemented) it only remains to
-replace code that "throws" with a call to a well-documented "handler"
-function in a separate compilation unit which may be replaced by
-the user. The main source of exceptions that would be difficult
-for users to avoid is memory allocation failures, but users can
-define their own memory allocation primitives that never throw.
-Otherwise, the complete list of such handlers, and which library
-functions may call them, would be needed for users to be able to
-implement the necessary substitutes. (Fortunately, they have the
-source code.)
+ Given the support above (however implemented) it only remains to
+ replace code that "throws" with a call to a well-documented "handler"
+ function in a separate compilation unit which may be replaced by
+ the user. The main source of exceptions that would be difficult
+ for users to avoid is memory allocation failures, but users can
+ define their own memory allocation primitives that never throw.
+ Otherwise, the complete list of such handlers, and which library
+ functions may call them, would be needed for users to be able to
+ implement the necessary substitutes. (Fortunately, they have the
+ source code.)
-Opportunities
--------------
+ Opportunities
+ -------------
-The template capabilities of C++ offer enormous opportunities for
-optimizing common library operations, well beyond what would be
-considered "eliminating overhead". In particular, many operations
-done in Glibc with macros that depend on proprietary language
-extensions can be implemented in pristine Standard C++. For example,
-the chapter 25 algorithms, and even C library functions such as strchr,
-can be specialized for the case of static arrays of known (small) size.
+ The template capabilities of C++ offer enormous opportunities for
+ optimizing common library operations, well beyond what would be
+ considered "eliminating overhead". In particular, many operations
+ done in Glibc with macros that depend on proprietary language
+ extensions can be implemented in pristine Standard C++. For example,
+ the chapter 25 algorithms, and even C library functions such as strchr,
+ can be specialized for the case of static arrays of known (small) size.
-Detailed optimization opportunities are identified below where
-the component where they would appear is discussed. Of course new
-opportunities will be identified during implementation.
+ Detailed optimization opportunities are identified below where
+ the component where they would appear is discussed. Of course new
+ opportunities will be identified during implementation.
-Unimplemented Required Library Features
----------------------------------------
+ Unimplemented Required Library Features
+ ---------------------------------------
-The standard specifies hundreds of components, grouped broadly by
-chapter. These are listed in excruciating detail in the CHECKLIST
-file.
+ The standard specifies hundreds of components, grouped broadly by
+ chapter. These are listed in excruciating detail in the CHECKLIST
+ file.
- 17 general
- 18 support
- 19 diagnostics
- 20 utilities
- 21 string
- 22 locale
- 23 containers
- 24 iterators
- 25 algorithms
- 26 numerics
- 27 iostreams
- Annex D backward compatibility
+ 17 general
+ 18 support
+ 19 diagnostics
+ 20 utilities
+ 21 string
+ 22 locale
+ 23 containers
+ 24 iterators
+ 25 algorithms
+ 26 numerics
+ 27 iostreams
+ Annex D backward compatibility
-Anyone participating in implementation of the library should obtain
-a copy of the standard, ISO 14882. People in the U.S. can obtain an
-electronic copy for US$18 from ANSI's web site. Those from other
-countries should visit http://www.iso.ch/ to find out the location
-of their country's representation in ISO, in order to know who can
-sell them a copy.
+ Anyone participating in implementation of the library should obtain
+ a copy of the standard, ISO 14882. People in the U.S. can obtain an
+ electronic copy for US$18 from ANSI's web site. Those from other
+ countries should visit http://www.iso.ch/ to find out the location
+ of their country's representation in ISO, in order to know who can
+ sell them a copy.
-The emphasis in the following sections is on unimplemented features
-and optimization opportunities.
+ The emphasis in the following sections is on unimplemented features
+ and optimization opportunities.
-Chapter 17 General
--------------------
+ Chapter 17 General
+ -------------------
-Chapter 17 concerns overall library requirements.
+ Chapter 17 concerns overall library requirements.
-The standard doesn't mention threads. A multi-thread (MT) extension
-primarily affects operators new and delete (18), allocator (20),
-string (21), locale (22), and iostreams (27). The common underlying
-support needed for this is discussed under chapter 20.
+ The standard doesn't mention threads. A multi-thread (MT) extension
+ primarily affects operators new and delete (18), allocator (20),
+ string (21), locale (22), and iostreams (27). The common underlying
+ support needed for this is discussed under chapter 20.
-The standard requirements on names from the C headers create a
-lot of work, mostly done. Names in the C headers must be visible
-in the std:: and sometimes the global namespace; the names in the
-two scopes must refer to the same object. More stringent is that
-Koenig lookup implies that any types specified as defined in std::
-really are defined in std::. Names optionally implemented as
-macros in C cannot be macros in C++. (An overview may be read at
-<http://www.cantrip.org/cheaders.html>). The scripts "inclosure"
-and "mkcshadow", and the directories shadow/ and cshadow/, are the
-beginning of an effort to conform in this area.
+ The standard requirements on names from the C headers create a
+ lot of work, mostly done. Names in the C headers must be visible
+ in the std:: and sometimes the global namespace; the names in the
+ two scopes must refer to the same object. More stringent is that
+ Koenig lookup implies that any types specified as defined in std::
+ really are defined in std::. Names optionally implemented as
+ macros in C cannot be macros in C++. (An overview may be read at
+ <http://www.cantrip.org/cheaders.html>). The scripts "inclosure"
+ and "mkcshadow", and the directories shadow/ and cshadow/, are the
+ beginning of an effort to conform in this area.
-A correct conforming definition of C header names based on underlying
-C library headers, and practical linking of conforming namespaced
-customer code with third-party C libraries depends ultimately on
-an ABI change, allowing namespaced C type names to be mangled into
-type names as if they were global, somewhat as C function names in a
-namespace, or C++ global variable names, are left unmangled. Perhaps
-another "extern" mode, such as 'extern "C-global"' would be an
-appropriate place for such type definitions. Such a type would
-affect mangling as follows:
+ A correct conforming definition of C header names based on underlying
+ C library headers, and practical linking of conforming namespaced
+ customer code with third-party C libraries depends ultimately on
+ an ABI change, allowing namespaced C type names to be mangled into
+ type names as if they were global, somewhat as C function names in a
+ namespace, or C++ global variable names, are left unmangled. Perhaps
+ another "extern" mode, such as 'extern "C-global"' would be an
+ appropriate place for such type definitions. Such a type would
+ affect mangling as follows:
- namespace A {
+ namespace A {
struct X {};
extern "C-global" { // or maybe just 'extern "C"'
- struct Y {};
+ struct Y {};
};
- }
- void f(A::X*); // mangles to f__FPQ21A1X
- void f(A::Y*); // mangles to f__FP1Y
-
-(It may be that this is really the appropriate semantics for regular
-'extern "C"', and 'extern "C-global"', as an extension, would not be
-necessary.) This would allow functions declared in non-standard C headers
-(and thus fixable by neither us nor users) to link properly with functions
-declared using C types defined in properly-namespaced headers. The
-problem this solves is that C headers (which C++ programmers do persist
-in using) frequently forward-declare C struct tags without including
-the header where the type is defined, as in
-
- struct tm;
- void munge(tm*);
-
-Without some compiler accommodation, munge cannot be called by correct
-C++ code using a pointer to a correctly-scoped tm* value.
-
-The current C headers use the preprocessor extension "#include_next",
-which the compiler complains about when run "-pedantic".
-(Incidentally, it appears that "-fpedantic" is currently ignored,
-probably a bug.) The solution in the C compiler is to use
-"-isystem" rather than "-I", but unfortunately in g++ this seems
-also to wrap the whole header in an 'extern "C"' block, so it's
-unusable for C++ headers. The correct solution appears to be to
-allow the various special include-directory options, if not given
-an argument, to affect subsequent include-directory options additively,
-so that if one said
-
- -pedantic -iprefix $(prefix) \
- -idirafter -ino-pedantic -ino-extern-c -iwithprefix -I g++-v3 \
- -iwithprefix -I g++-v3/ext
-
-the compiler would search $(prefix)/g++-v3 and not report
-pedantic warnings for files found there, but treat files in
-$(prefix)/g++-v3/ext pedantically. (The undocumented semantics
-of "-isystem" in g++ stink. Can they be rescinded? If not it
-must be replaced with something more rationally behaved.)
-
-All the C headers need the treatment above; in the standard these
-headers are mentioned in various chapters. Below, I have only
-mentioned those that present interesting implementation issues.
-
-The components identified as "mostly complete", below, have not been
-audited for conformance. In many cases where the library passes
-conformance tests we have non-conforming extensions that must be
-wrapped in #if guards for "pedantic" use, and in some cases renamed
-in a conforming way for continued use in the implementation regardless
-of conformance flags.
-
-The STL portion of the library still depends on a header
-stl/bits/stl_config.h full of #ifdef clauses. This apparatus
-should be replaced with autoconf/automake machinery.
-
-The SGI STL defines a type_traits<> template, specialized for
-many types in their code including the built-in numeric and
-pointer types and some library types, to direct optimizations of
-standard functions. The SGI compiler has been extended to generate
-specializations of this template automatically for user types,
-so that use of STL templates on user types can take advantage of
-these optimizations. Specializations for other, non-STL, types
-would make more optimizations possible, but extending the gcc
-compiler in the same way would be much better. Probably the next
-round of standardization will ratify this, but probably with
-changes, so it probably should be renamed to place it in the
-implementation namespace.
-
-The SGI STL also defines a large number of extensions visible in
-standard headers. (Other extensions that appear in separate headers
-have been sequestered in subdirectories ext/ and backward/.) All
-these extensions should be moved to other headers where possible,
-and in any case wrapped in a namespace (not std!), and (where kept
-in a standard header) girded about with macro guards. Some cannot be
-moved out of standard headers because they are used to implement
-standard features. The canonical method for accommodating these
-is to use a protected name, aliased in macro guards to a user-space
-name. Unfortunately C++ offers no satisfactory template typedef
-mechanism, so very ad-hoc and unsatisfactory aliasing must be used
-instead.
-
-Implementation of a template typedef mechanism should have the highest
-priority among possible extensions, on the same level as implementation
-of the template "export" feature.
-
-Chapter 18 Language support
-----------------------------
-
-Headers: <limits> <new> <typeinfo> <exception>
-C headers: <cstddef> <climits> <cfloat> <cstdarg> <csetjmp>
- <ctime> <csignal> <cstdlib> (also 21, 25, 26)
-
-This defines the built-in exceptions, rtti, numeric_limits<>,
-operator new and delete. Much of this is provided by the
-compiler in its static runtime library.
-
-Work to do includes defining numeric_limits<> specializations in
-separate files for all target architectures. Values for integer types
-except for bool and wchar_t are readily obtained from the C header
-<limits.h>, but values for the remaining numeric types (bool, wchar_t,
-float, double, long double) must be entered manually. This is
-largely dog work except for those members whose values are not
-easily deduced from available documentation. Also, this involves
-some work in target configuration to identify the correct choice of
-file to build against and to install.
-
-The definitions of the various operators new and delete must be
-made thread-safe, which depends on a portable exclusion mechanism,
-discussed under chapter 20. Of course there is always plenty of
-room for improvements to the speed of operators new and delete.
-
-<cstdarg>, in Glibc, defines some macros that gcc does not allow to
-be wrapped into an inline function. Probably this header will demand
-attention whenever a new target is chosen. The functions atexit(),
-exit(), and abort() in cstdlib have different semantics in C++, so
-must be re-implemented for C++.
-
-Chapter 19 Diagnostics
------------------------
-
-Headers: <stdexcept>
-C headers: <cassert> <cerrno>
-
-This defines the standard exception objects, which are "mostly complete".
-Cygnus has a version, and now SGI provides a slightly different one.
-It makes little difference which we use.
-
-The C global name "errno", which C allows to be a variable or a macro,
-is required in C++ to be a macro. For MT it must typically result in
-a function call.
-
-Chapter 20 Utilities
----------------------
-Headers: <utility> <functional> <memory>
-C header: <ctime> (also in 18)
-
-SGI STL provides "mostly complete" versions of all the components
-defined in this chapter. However, the auto_ptr<> implementation
-is known to be wrong. Furthermore, the standard definition of it
-is known to be unimplementable as written. A minor change to the
-standard would fix it, and auto_ptr<> should be adjusted to match.
-
-Multi-threading affects the allocator implementation, and there must
-be configuration/installation choices for different users' MT
-requirements. Anyway, users will want to tune allocator options
-to support different target conditions, MT or no.
-
-The primitives used for MT implementation should be exposed, as an
-extension, for users' own work. We need cross-CPU "mutex" support,
-multi-processor shared-memory atomic integer operations, and single-
-processor uninterruptible integer operations, and all three configurable
-to be stubbed out for non-MT use, or to use an appropriately-loaded
-dynamic library for the actual runtime environment, or statically
-compiled in for cases where the target architecture is known.
-
-Chapter 21 String
-------------------
-Headers: <string>
-C headers: <cctype> <cwctype> <cstring> <cwchar> (also in 27)
- <cstdlib> (also in 18, 25, 26)
-
-We have "mostly-complete" char_traits<> implementations. Many of the
-char_traits<char> operations might be optimized further using existing
-proprietary language extensions.
-
-We have a "mostly-complete" basic_string<> implementation. The work
-to manually instantiate char and wchar_t specializations in object
-files to improve link-time behavior is extremely unsatisfactory,
-literally tripling library-build time with no commensurate improvement
-in static program link sizes. It must be redone. (Similar work is
-needed for some components in chapters 22 and 27.)
-
-Other work needed for strings is MT-safety, as discussed under the
-chapter 20 heading.
-
-The standard C type mbstate_t from <cwchar> and used in char_traits<>
-must be different in C++ than in C, because in C++ the default constructor
-value mbstate_t() must be the "base" or "ground" sequence state.
-(According to the likely resolution of a recently raised Core issue,
-this may become unnecessary. However, there are other reasons to
-use a state type not as limited as whatever the C library provides.)
-If we might want to provide conversions from (e.g.) internally-
-represented EUC-wide to externally-represented Unicode, or vice-
-versa, the mbstate_t we choose will need to be more accommodating
-than what might be provided by an underlying C library.
-
-There remain some basic_string template-member functions which do
-not overload properly with their non-template brethren. The infamous
-hack akin to what was done in vector<> is needed, to conform to
-23.1.1 para 10. The CHECKLIST items for basic_string marked 'X',
-or incomplete, are so marked for this reason.
-
-Replacing the string iterators, which currently are simple character
-pointers, with class objects would greatly increase the safety of the
-client interface, and also permit a "debug" mode in which range,
-ownership, and validity are rigorously checked. The current use of
-raw pointers as string iterators is evil. vector<> iterators need the
-same treatment. Note that the current implementation freely mixes
-pointers and iterators, and that must be fixed before safer iterators
-can be introduced.
-
-Some of the functions in <cstring> are different from the C version.
-generally overloaded on const and non-const argument pointers. For
-example, in <cstring> strchr is overloaded. The functions isupper
-etc. in <cctype> typically implemented as macros in C are functions
-in C++, because they are overloaded with others of the same name
-defined in <locale>.
-
-Many of the functions required in <cwctype> and <cwchar> cannot be
-implemented using underlying C facilities on intended targets because
-such facilities only partly exist.
-
-Chapter 22 Locale
-------------------
-Headers: <locale>
-C headers: <clocale>
-
-We have a "mostly complete" class locale, with the exception of
-code for constructing, and handling the names of, named locales.
-The ways that locales are named (particularly when categories
-(e.g. LC_TIME, LC_COLLATE) are different) varies among all target
-environments. This code must be written in various versions and
-chosen by configuration parameters.
-
-Members of many of the facets defined in <locale> are stubs. Generally,
-there are two sets of facets: the base class facets (which are supposed
-to implement the "C" locale) and the "byname" facets, which are supposed
-to read files to determine their behavior. The base ctype<>, collate<>,
-and numpunct<> facets are "mostly complete", except that the table of
-bitmask values used for "is" operations, and corresponding mask values,
-are still defined in libio and just included/linked. (We will need to
-implement these tables independently, soon, but should take advantage
-of libio where possible.) The num_put<>::put members for integer types
-are "mostly complete".
-
-A complete list of what has and has not been implemented may be
-found in CHECKLIST. However, note that the current definition of
-codecvt<wchar_t,char,mbstate_t> is wrong. It should simply write
-out the raw bytes representing the wide characters, rather than
-trying to convert each to a corresponding single "char" value.
-
-Some of the facets are more important than others. Specifically,
-the members of ctype<>, numpunct<>, num_put<>, and num_get<> facets
-are used by other library facilities defined in <string>, <istream>,
-and <ostream>, and the codecvt<> facet is used by basic_filebuf<>
-in <fstream>, so a conforming iostream implementation depends on
-these.
-
-The "long long" type eventually must be supported, but code mentioning
-it should be wrapped in #if guards to allow pedantic-mode compiling.
-
-Performance of num_put<> and num_get<> depend critically on
-caching computed values in ios_base objects, and on extensions
-to the interface with streambufs.
-
-Specifically: retrieving a copy of the locale object, extracting
-the needed facets, and gathering data from them, for each call to
-(e.g.) operator<< would be prohibitively slow. To cache format
-data for use by num_put<> and num_get<> we have a _Format_cache<>
-object stored in the ios_base::pword() array. This is constructed
-and initialized lazily, and is organized purely for utility. It
-is discarded when a new locale with different facets is imbued.
-
-Using only the public interfaces of the iterator arguments to the
-facet functions would limit performance by forbidding "vector-style"
-character operations. The streambuf iterator optimizations are
-described under chapter 24, but facets can also bypass the streambuf
-iterators via explicit specializations and operate directly on the
-streambufs, and use extended interfaces to get direct access to the
-streambuf internal buffer arrays. These extensions are mentioned
-under chapter 27. These optimizations are particularly important
-for input parsing.
-
-Unused virtual members of locale facets can be omitted, as mentioned
-above, by a smart linker.
-
-Chapter 23 Containers
-----------------------
-Headers: <deque> <list> <queue> <stack> <vector> <map> <set> <bitset>
-
-All the components in chapter 23 are implemented in the SGI STL.
-They are "mostly complete"; they include a large number of
-nonconforming extensions which must be wrapped. Some of these
-are used internally and must be renamed or duplicated.
-
-The SGI components are optimized for large-memory environments. For
-embedded targets, different criteria might be more appropriate. Users
-will want to be able to tune this behavior. We should provide
-ways for users to compile the library with different memory usage
-characteristics.
-
-A lot more work is needed on factoring out common code from different
-specializations to reduce code size here and in chapter 25. The
-easiest fix for this would be a compiler/ABI improvement that allows
-the compiler to recognize when a specialization depends only on the
-size (or other gross quality) of a template argument, and allow the
-linker to share the code with similar specializations. In its
-absence, many of the algorithms and containers can be partial-
-specialized, at least for the case of pointers, but this only solves
-a small part of the problem. Use of a type_traits-style template
-allows a few more optimization opportunities, more if the compiler
-can generate the specializations automatically.
-
-As an optimization, containers can specialize on the default allocator
-and bypass it, or take advantage of details of its implementation
-after it has been improved upon.
-
-Replacing the vector iterators, which currently are simple element
-pointers, with class objects would greatly increase the safety of the
-client interface, and also permit a "debug" mode in which range,
-ownership, and validity are rigorously checked. The current use of
-pointers for iterators is evil.
-
-As mentioned for chapter 24, the deque iterator is a good example of
-an opportunity to implement a "staged" iterator that would benefit
-from specializations of some algorithms.
-
-Chapter 24 Iterators
----------------------
-Headers: <iterator>
-
-Standard iterators are "mostly complete", with the exception of
-the stream iterators, which are not yet templatized on the
-stream type. Also, the base class template iterator<> appears
-to be wrong, so everything derived from it must also be wrong,
-currently.
-
-The streambuf iterators (currently located in stl/bits/std_iterator.h,
-but should be under bits/) can be rewritten to take advantage of
-friendship with the streambuf implementation.
-
-Matt Austern has identified opportunities where certain iterator
-types, particularly including streambuf iterators and deque
-iterators, have a "two-stage" quality, such that an intermediate
-limit can be checked much more quickly than the true limit on
-range operations. If identified with a member of iterator_traits,
-algorithms may be specialized for this case. Of course the
-iterators that have this quality can be identified by specializing
-a traits class.
-
-Many of the algorithms must be specialized for the streambuf
-iterators, to take advantage of block-mode operations, in order
-to allow iostream/locale operations' performance not to suffer.
-It may be that they could be treated as staged iterators and
-take advantage of those optimizations.
-
-Chapter 25 Algorithms
-----------------------
-Headers: <algorithm>
-C headers: <cstdlib> (also in 18, 21, 26))
-
-The algorithms are "mostly complete". As mentioned above, they
-are optimized for speed at the expense of code and data size.
-
-Specializations of many of the algorithms for non-STL types would
-give performance improvements, but we must use great care not to
-interfere with fragile template overloading semantics for the
-standard interfaces. Conventionally the standard function template
-interface is an inline which delegates to a non-standard function
-which is then overloaded (this is already done in many places in
-the library). Particularly appealing opportunities for the sake of
-iostream performance are for copy and find applied to streambuf
-iterators or (as noted elsewhere) for staged iterators, of which
-the streambuf iterators are a good example.
-
-The bsearch and qsort functions cannot be overloaded properly as
-required by the standard because gcc does not yet allow overloading
-on the extern-"C"-ness of a function pointer.
-
-Chapter 26 Numerics
---------------------
-Headers: <complex> <valarray> <numeric>
-C headers: <cmath>, <cstdlib> (also 18, 21, 25)
-
-Numeric components: Gabriel dos Reis's valarray, Drepper's complex,
-and the few algorithms from the STL are "mostly done". Of course
-optimization opportunities abound for the numerically literate. It
-is not clear whether the valarray implementation really conforms
-fully, in the assumptions it makes about aliasing (and lack thereof)
-in its arguments.
-
-The C div() and ldiv() functions are interesting, because they are the
-only case where a C library function returns a class object by value.
-Since the C++ type div_t must be different from the underlying C type
-(which is in the wrong namespace) the underlying functions div() and
-ldiv() cannot be re-used efficiently. Fortunately they are trivial to
-re-implement.
-
-Chapter 27 Iostreams
----------------------
-Headers: <iosfwd> <streambuf> <ios> <ostream> <istream> <iostream>
- <iomanip> <sstream> <fstream>
-C headers: <cstdio> <cwchar> (also in 21)
-
-Iostream is currently in a very incomplete state. <iosfwd>, <iomanip>,
-ios_base, and basic_ios<> are "mostly complete". basic_streambuf<> and
-basic_ostream<> are well along, but basic_istream<> has had little work
-done. The standard stream objects, <sstream> and <fstream> have been
-started; basic_filebuf<> "write" functions have been implemented just
-enough to do "hello, world".
-
-Most of the istream and ostream operators << and >> (with the exception
-of the op<<(integer) ones) have not been changed to use locale primitives,
-sentry objects, or char_traits members.
-
-All these templates should be manually instantiated for char and
-wchar_t in a way that links only used members into user programs.
-
-Streambuf is fertile ground for optimization extensions. An extended
-interface giving iterator access to its internal buffer would be very
-useful for other library components.
-
-Iostream operations (primarily operators << and >>) can take advantage
-of the case where user code has not specified a locale, and bypass locale
-operations entirely. The current implementation of op<</num_put<>::put,
-for the integer types, demonstrates how they can cache encoding details
-from the locale on each operation. There is lots more room for
-optimization in this area.
-
-The definition of the relationship between the standard streams
-cout et al. and stdout et al. requires something like a "stdiobuf".
-The SGI solution of using double-indirection to actually use a
-stdio FILE object for buffering is unsatisfactory, because it
-interferes with peephole loop optimizations.
-
-The <sstream> header work has begun. stringbuf can benefit from
-friendship with basic_string<> and basic_string<>::_Rep to use
-those objects directly as buffers, and avoid allocating and making
-copies.
-
-The basic_filebuf<> template is a complex beast. It is specified to
-use the locale facet codecvt<> to translate characters between native
-files and the locale character encoding. In general this involves
-two buffers, one of "char" representing the file and another of
-"char_type", for the stream, with codecvt<> translating. The process
-is complicated by the variable-length nature of the translation, and
-the need to seek to corresponding places in the two representations.
-For the case of basic_filebuf<char>, when no translation is needed,
-a single buffer suffices. A specialized filebuf can be used to reduce
-code space overhead when no locale has been imbued. Matt Austern's
-work at SGI will be useful, perhaps directly as a source of code, or
-at least as an example to draw on.
-
-Filebuf, almost uniquely (cf. operator new), depends heavily on
-underlying environmental facilities. In current releases iostream
-depends fairly heavily on libio constant definitions, but it should
-be made independent. It also depends on operating system primitives
-for file operations. There is immense room for optimizations using
-(e.g.) mmap for reading. The shadow/ directory wraps, besides the
-standard C headers, the libio.h and unistd.h headers, for use mainly
-by filebuf. These wrappings have not been completed, though there
-is scaffolding in place.
-
-The encapulation of certain C header <cstdio> names presents an
-interesting problem. It is possible to define an inline std::fprintf()
-implemented in terms of the 'extern "C"' vfprintf(), but there is no
-standard vfscanf() to use to implement std::fscanf(). It appears that
-vfscanf but be re-implemented in C++ for targets where no vfscanf
-extension has been defined. This is interesting in that it seems
-to be the only significant case in the C library where this kind of
-rewriting is necessary. (Of course Glibc provides the vfscanf()
-extension.) (The functions related to exit() must be rewritten
-for other reasons.)
-
-
-Annex D
--------
-Headers: <strstream>
-
-Annex D defines many non-library features, and many minor
-modifications to various headers, and a complete header.
-It is "mostly done", except that the libstdc++-2 <strstream>
-header has not been adopted into the library, or checked to
-verify that it matches the draft in those details that were
-clarified by the committee. Certainly it must at least be
-moved into the std namespace.
-
-We still need to wrap all the deprecated features in #if guards
-so that pedantic compile modes can detect their use.
-
-Nonstandard Extensions
-----------------------
-Headers: <iostream.h> <strstream.h> <hash> <rbtree>
- <pthread_alloc> <stdiobuf> (etc.)
-
-User code has come to depend on a variety of nonstandard components
-that we must not omit. Much of this code can be adopted from
-libstdc++-v2 or from the SGI STL. This particularly includes
-<iostream.h>, <strstream.h>, and various SGI extensions such
-as <hash_map.h>. Many of these are already placed in the
-subdirectories ext/ and backward/. (Note that it is better to
-include them via "<backward/hash_map.h>" or "<ext/hash_map>" than
-to search the subdirectory itself via a "-I" directive.
-
-
+ }
+ void f(A::X*); // mangles to f__FPQ21A1X
+ void f(A::Y*); // mangles to f__FP1Y
+
+ (It may be that this is really the appropriate semantics for regular
+ 'extern "C"', and 'extern "C-global"', as an extension, would not be
+ necessary.) This would allow functions declared in non-standard C headers
+ (and thus fixable by neither us nor users) to link properly with functions
+ declared using C types defined in properly-namespaced headers. The
+ problem this solves is that C headers (which C++ programmers do persist
+ in using) frequently forward-declare C struct tags without including
+ the header where the type is defined, as in
+
+ struct tm;
+ void munge(tm*);
+
+ Without some compiler accommodation, munge cannot be called by correct
+ C++ code using a pointer to a correctly-scoped tm* value.
+
+ The current C headers use the preprocessor extension "#include_next",
+ which the compiler complains about when run "-pedantic".
+ (Incidentally, it appears that "-fpedantic" is currently ignored,
+ probably a bug.) The solution in the C compiler is to use
+ "-isystem" rather than "-I", but unfortunately in g++ this seems
+ also to wrap the whole header in an 'extern "C"' block, so it's
+ unusable for C++ headers. The correct solution appears to be to
+ allow the various special include-directory options, if not given
+ an argument, to affect subsequent include-directory options additively,
+ so that if one said
+
+ -pedantic -iprefix $(prefix) \
+ -idirafter -ino-pedantic -ino-extern-c -iwithprefix -I g++-v3 \
+ -iwithprefix -I g++-v3/ext
+
+ the compiler would search $(prefix)/g++-v3 and not report
+ pedantic warnings for files found there, but treat files in
+ $(prefix)/g++-v3/ext pedantically. (The undocumented semantics
+ of "-isystem" in g++ stink. Can they be rescinded? If not it
+ must be replaced with something more rationally behaved.)
+
+ All the C headers need the treatment above; in the standard these
+ headers are mentioned in various chapters. Below, I have only
+ mentioned those that present interesting implementation issues.
+
+ The components identified as "mostly complete", below, have not been
+ audited for conformance. In many cases where the library passes
+ conformance tests we have non-conforming extensions that must be
+ wrapped in #if guards for "pedantic" use, and in some cases renamed
+ in a conforming way for continued use in the implementation regardless
+ of conformance flags.
+
+ The STL portion of the library still depends on a header
+ stl/bits/stl_config.h full of #ifdef clauses. This apparatus
+ should be replaced with autoconf/automake machinery.
+
+ The SGI STL defines a type_traits<> template, specialized for
+ many types in their code including the built-in numeric and
+ pointer types and some library types, to direct optimizations of
+ standard functions. The SGI compiler has been extended to generate
+ specializations of this template automatically for user types,
+ so that use of STL templates on user types can take advantage of
+ these optimizations. Specializations for other, non-STL, types
+ would make more optimizations possible, but extending the gcc
+ compiler in the same way would be much better. Probably the next
+ round of standardization will ratify this, but probably with
+ changes, so it probably should be renamed to place it in the
+ implementation namespace.
+
+ The SGI STL also defines a large number of extensions visible in
+ standard headers. (Other extensions that appear in separate headers
+ have been sequestered in subdirectories ext/ and backward/.) All
+ these extensions should be moved to other headers where possible,
+ and in any case wrapped in a namespace (not std!), and (where kept
+ in a standard header) girded about with macro guards. Some cannot be
+ moved out of standard headers because they are used to implement
+ standard features. The canonical method for accommodating these
+ is to use a protected name, aliased in macro guards to a user-space
+ name. Unfortunately C++ offers no satisfactory template typedef
+ mechanism, so very ad-hoc and unsatisfactory aliasing must be used
+ instead.
+
+ Implementation of a template typedef mechanism should have the highest
+ priority among possible extensions, on the same level as implementation
+ of the template "export" feature.
+
+ Chapter 18 Language support
+ ----------------------------
+
+ Headers: <limits> <new> <typeinfo> <exception>
+ C headers: <cstddef> <climits> <cfloat> <cstdarg> <csetjmp>
+ <ctime> <csignal> <cstdlib> (also 21, 25, 26)
+
+ This defines the built-in exceptions, rtti, numeric_limits<>,
+ operator new and delete. Much of this is provided by the
+ compiler in its static runtime library.
+
+ Work to do includes defining numeric_limits<> specializations in
+ separate files for all target architectures. Values for integer types
+ except for bool and wchar_t are readily obtained from the C header
+ <limits.h>, but values for the remaining numeric types (bool, wchar_t,
+ float, double, long double) must be entered manually. This is
+ largely dog work except for those members whose values are not
+ easily deduced from available documentation. Also, this involves
+ some work in target configuration to identify the correct choice of
+ file to build against and to install.
+
+ The definitions of the various operators new and delete must be
+ made thread-safe, which depends on a portable exclusion mechanism,
+ discussed under chapter 20. Of course there is always plenty of
+ room for improvements to the speed of operators new and delete.
+
+ <cstdarg>, in Glibc, defines some macros that gcc does not allow to
+ be wrapped into an inline function. Probably this header will demand
+ attention whenever a new target is chosen. The functions atexit(),
+ exit(), and abort() in cstdlib have different semantics in C++, so
+ must be re-implemented for C++.
+
+ Chapter 19 Diagnostics
+ -----------------------
+
+ Headers: <stdexcept>
+ C headers: <cassert> <cerrno>
+
+ This defines the standard exception objects, which are "mostly complete".
+ Cygnus has a version, and now SGI provides a slightly different one.
+ It makes little difference which we use.
+
+ The C global name "errno", which C allows to be a variable or a macro,
+ is required in C++ to be a macro. For MT it must typically result in
+ a function call.
+
+ Chapter 20 Utilities
+ ---------------------
+ Headers: <utility> <functional> <memory>
+ C header: <ctime> (also in 18)
+
+ SGI STL provides "mostly complete" versions of all the components
+ defined in this chapter. However, the auto_ptr<> implementation
+ is known to be wrong. Furthermore, the standard definition of it
+ is known to be unimplementable as written. A minor change to the
+ standard would fix it, and auto_ptr<> should be adjusted to match.
+
+ Multi-threading affects the allocator implementation, and there must
+ be configuration/installation choices for different users' MT
+ requirements. Anyway, users will want to tune allocator options
+ to support different target conditions, MT or no.
+
+ The primitives used for MT implementation should be exposed, as an
+ extension, for users' own work. We need cross-CPU "mutex" support,
+ multi-processor shared-memory atomic integer operations, and single-
+ processor uninterruptible integer operations, and all three configurable
+ to be stubbed out for non-MT use, or to use an appropriately-loaded
+ dynamic library for the actual runtime environment, or statically
+ compiled in for cases where the target architecture is known.
+
+ Chapter 21 String
+ ------------------
+ Headers: <string>
+ C headers: <cctype> <cwctype> <cstring> <cwchar> (also in 27)
+ <cstdlib> (also in 18, 25, 26)
+
+ We have "mostly-complete" char_traits<> implementations. Many of the
+ char_traits<char> operations might be optimized further using existing
+ proprietary language extensions.
+
+ We have a "mostly-complete" basic_string<> implementation. The work
+ to manually instantiate char and wchar_t specializations in object
+ files to improve link-time behavior is extremely unsatisfactory,
+ literally tripling library-build time with no commensurate improvement
+ in static program link sizes. It must be redone. (Similar work is
+ needed for some components in chapters 22 and 27.)
+
+ Other work needed for strings is MT-safety, as discussed under the
+ chapter 20 heading.
+
+ The standard C type mbstate_t from <cwchar> and used in char_traits<>
+ must be different in C++ than in C, because in C++ the default constructor
+ value mbstate_t() must be the "base" or "ground" sequence state.
+ (According to the likely resolution of a recently raised Core issue,
+ this may become unnecessary. However, there are other reasons to
+ use a state type not as limited as whatever the C library provides.)
+ If we might want to provide conversions from (e.g.) internally-
+ represented EUC-wide to externally-represented Unicode, or vice-
+ versa, the mbstate_t we choose will need to be more accommodating
+ than what might be provided by an underlying C library.
+
+ There remain some basic_string template-member functions which do
+ not overload properly with their non-template brethren. The infamous
+ hack akin to what was done in vector<> is needed, to conform to
+ 23.1.1 para 10. The CHECKLIST items for basic_string marked 'X',
+ or incomplete, are so marked for this reason.
+
+ Replacing the string iterators, which currently are simple character
+ pointers, with class objects would greatly increase the safety of the
+ client interface, and also permit a "debug" mode in which range,
+ ownership, and validity are rigorously checked. The current use of
+ raw pointers as string iterators is evil. vector<> iterators need the
+ same treatment. Note that the current implementation freely mixes
+ pointers and iterators, and that must be fixed before safer iterators
+ can be introduced.
+
+ Some of the functions in <cstring> are different from the C version.
+ generally overloaded on const and non-const argument pointers. For
+ example, in <cstring> strchr is overloaded. The functions isupper
+ etc. in <cctype> typically implemented as macros in C are functions
+ in C++, because they are overloaded with others of the same name
+ defined in <locale>.
+
+ Many of the functions required in <cwctype> and <cwchar> cannot be
+ implemented using underlying C facilities on intended targets because
+ such facilities only partly exist.
+
+ Chapter 22 Locale
+ ------------------
+ Headers: <locale>
+ C headers: <clocale>
+
+ We have a "mostly complete" class locale, with the exception of
+ code for constructing, and handling the names of, named locales.
+ The ways that locales are named (particularly when categories
+ (e.g. LC_TIME, LC_COLLATE) are different) varies among all target
+ environments. This code must be written in various versions and
+ chosen by configuration parameters.
+
+ Members of many of the facets defined in <locale> are stubs. Generally,
+ there are two sets of facets: the base class facets (which are supposed
+ to implement the "C" locale) and the "byname" facets, which are supposed
+ to read files to determine their behavior. The base ctype<>, collate<>,
+ and numpunct<> facets are "mostly complete", except that the table of
+ bitmask values used for "is" operations, and corresponding mask values,
+ are still defined in libio and just included/linked. (We will need to
+ implement these tables independently, soon, but should take advantage
+ of libio where possible.) The num_put<>::put members for integer types
+ are "mostly complete".
+
+ A complete list of what has and has not been implemented may be
+ found in CHECKLIST. However, note that the current definition of
+ codecvt<wchar_t,char,mbstate_t> is wrong. It should simply write
+ out the raw bytes representing the wide characters, rather than
+ trying to convert each to a corresponding single "char" value.
+
+ Some of the facets are more important than others. Specifically,
+ the members of ctype<>, numpunct<>, num_put<>, and num_get<> facets
+ are used by other library facilities defined in <string>, <istream>,
+ and <ostream>, and the codecvt<> facet is used by basic_filebuf<>
+ in <fstream>, so a conforming iostream implementation depends on
+ these.
+
+ The "long long" type eventually must be supported, but code mentioning
+ it should be wrapped in #if guards to allow pedantic-mode compiling.
+
+ Performance of num_put<> and num_get<> depend critically on
+ caching computed values in ios_base objects, and on extensions
+ to the interface with streambufs.
+
+ Specifically: retrieving a copy of the locale object, extracting
+ the needed facets, and gathering data from them, for each call to
+ (e.g.) operator<< would be prohibitively slow. To cache format
+ data for use by num_put<> and num_get<> we have a _Format_cache<>
+ object stored in the ios_base::pword() array. This is constructed
+ and initialized lazily, and is organized purely for utility. It
+ is discarded when a new locale with different facets is imbued.
+
+ Using only the public interfaces of the iterator arguments to the
+ facet functions would limit performance by forbidding "vector-style"
+ character operations. The streambuf iterator optimizations are
+ described under chapter 24, but facets can also bypass the streambuf
+ iterators via explicit specializations and operate directly on the
+ streambufs, and use extended interfaces to get direct access to the
+ streambuf internal buffer arrays. These extensions are mentioned
+ under chapter 27. These optimizations are particularly important
+ for input parsing.
+
+ Unused virtual members of locale facets can be omitted, as mentioned
+ above, by a smart linker.
+
+ Chapter 23 Containers
+ ----------------------
+ Headers: <deque> <list> <queue> <stack> <vector> <map> <set> <bitset>
+
+ All the components in chapter 23 are implemented in the SGI STL.
+ They are "mostly complete"; they include a large number of
+ nonconforming extensions which must be wrapped. Some of these
+ are used internally and must be renamed or duplicated.
+
+ The SGI components are optimized for large-memory environments. For
+ embedded targets, different criteria might be more appropriate. Users
+ will want to be able to tune this behavior. We should provide
+ ways for users to compile the library with different memory usage
+ characteristics.
+
+ A lot more work is needed on factoring out common code from different
+ specializations to reduce code size here and in chapter 25. The
+ easiest fix for this would be a compiler/ABI improvement that allows
+ the compiler to recognize when a specialization depends only on the
+ size (or other gross quality) of a template argument, and allow the
+ linker to share the code with similar specializations. In its
+ absence, many of the algorithms and containers can be partial-
+ specialized, at least for the case of pointers, but this only solves
+ a small part of the problem. Use of a type_traits-style template
+ allows a few more optimization opportunities, more if the compiler
+ can generate the specializations automatically.
+
+ As an optimization, containers can specialize on the default allocator
+ and bypass it, or take advantage of details of its implementation
+ after it has been improved upon.
+
+ Replacing the vector iterators, which currently are simple element
+ pointers, with class objects would greatly increase the safety of the
+ client interface, and also permit a "debug" mode in which range,
+ ownership, and validity are rigorously checked. The current use of
+ pointers for iterators is evil.
+
+ As mentioned for chapter 24, the deque iterator is a good example of
+ an opportunity to implement a "staged" iterator that would benefit
+ from specializations of some algorithms.
+
+ Chapter 24 Iterators
+ ---------------------
+ Headers: <iterator>
+
+ Standard iterators are "mostly complete", with the exception of
+ the stream iterators, which are not yet templatized on the
+ stream type. Also, the base class template iterator<> appears
+ to be wrong, so everything derived from it must also be wrong,
+ currently.
+
+ The streambuf iterators (currently located in stl/bits/std_iterator.h,
+ but should be under bits/) can be rewritten to take advantage of
+ friendship with the streambuf implementation.
+
+ Matt Austern has identified opportunities where certain iterator
+ types, particularly including streambuf iterators and deque
+ iterators, have a "two-stage" quality, such that an intermediate
+ limit can be checked much more quickly than the true limit on
+ range operations. If identified with a member of iterator_traits,
+ algorithms may be specialized for this case. Of course the
+ iterators that have this quality can be identified by specializing
+ a traits class.
+
+ Many of the algorithms must be specialized for the streambuf
+ iterators, to take advantage of block-mode operations, in order
+ to allow iostream/locale operations' performance not to suffer.
+ It may be that they could be treated as staged iterators and
+ take advantage of those optimizations.
+
+ Chapter 25 Algorithms
+ ----------------------
+ Headers: <algorithm>
+ C headers: <cstdlib> (also in 18, 21, 26))
+
+ The algorithms are "mostly complete". As mentioned above, they
+ are optimized for speed at the expense of code and data size.
+
+ Specializations of many of the algorithms for non-STL types would
+ give performance improvements, but we must use great care not to
+ interfere with fragile template overloading semantics for the
+ standard interfaces. Conventionally the standard function template
+ interface is an inline which delegates to a non-standard function
+ which is then overloaded (this is already done in many places in
+ the library). Particularly appealing opportunities for the sake of
+ iostream performance are for copy and find applied to streambuf
+ iterators or (as noted elsewhere) for staged iterators, of which
+ the streambuf iterators are a good example.
+
+ The bsearch and qsort functions cannot be overloaded properly as
+ required by the standard because gcc does not yet allow overloading
+ on the extern-"C"-ness of a function pointer.
+
+ Chapter 26 Numerics
+ --------------------
+ Headers: <complex> <valarray> <numeric>
+ C headers: <cmath>, <cstdlib> (also 18, 21, 25)
+
+ Numeric components: Gabriel dos Reis's valarray, Drepper's complex,
+ and the few algorithms from the STL are "mostly done". Of course
+ optimization opportunities abound for the numerically literate. It
+ is not clear whether the valarray implementation really conforms
+ fully, in the assumptions it makes about aliasing (and lack thereof)
+ in its arguments.
+
+ The C div() and ldiv() functions are interesting, because they are the
+ only case where a C library function returns a class object by value.
+ Since the C++ type div_t must be different from the underlying C type
+ (which is in the wrong namespace) the underlying functions div() and
+ ldiv() cannot be re-used efficiently. Fortunately they are trivial to
+ re-implement.
+
+ Chapter 27 Iostreams
+ ---------------------
+ Headers: <iosfwd> <streambuf> <ios> <ostream> <istream> <iostream>
+ <iomanip> <sstream> <fstream>
+ C headers: <cstdio> <cwchar> (also in 21)
+
+ Iostream is currently in a very incomplete state. <iosfwd>, <iomanip>,
+ ios_base, and basic_ios<> are "mostly complete". basic_streambuf<> and
+ basic_ostream<> are well along, but basic_istream<> has had little work
+ done. The standard stream objects, <sstream> and <fstream> have been
+ started; basic_filebuf<> "write" functions have been implemented just
+ enough to do "hello, world".
+
+ Most of the istream and ostream operators << and >> (with the exception
+ of the op<<(integer) ones) have not been changed to use locale primitives,
+ sentry objects, or char_traits members.
+
+ All these templates should be manually instantiated for char and
+ wchar_t in a way that links only used members into user programs.
+
+ Streambuf is fertile ground for optimization extensions. An extended
+ interface giving iterator access to its internal buffer would be very
+ useful for other library components.
+
+ Iostream operations (primarily operators << and >>) can take advantage
+ of the case where user code has not specified a locale, and bypass locale
+ operations entirely. The current implementation of op<</num_put<>::put,
+ for the integer types, demonstrates how they can cache encoding details
+ from the locale on each operation. There is lots more room for
+ optimization in this area.
+
+ The definition of the relationship between the standard streams
+ cout et al. and stdout et al. requires something like a "stdiobuf".
+ The SGI solution of using double-indirection to actually use a
+ stdio FILE object for buffering is unsatisfactory, because it
+ interferes with peephole loop optimizations.
+
+ The <sstream> header work has begun. stringbuf can benefit from
+ friendship with basic_string<> and basic_string<>::_Rep to use
+ those objects directly as buffers, and avoid allocating and making
+ copies.
+
+ The basic_filebuf<> template is a complex beast. It is specified to
+ use the locale facet codecvt<> to translate characters between native
+ files and the locale character encoding. In general this involves
+ two buffers, one of "char" representing the file and another of
+ "char_type", for the stream, with codecvt<> translating. The process
+ is complicated by the variable-length nature of the translation, and
+ the need to seek to corresponding places in the two representations.
+ For the case of basic_filebuf<char>, when no translation is needed,
+ a single buffer suffices. A specialized filebuf can be used to reduce
+ code space overhead when no locale has been imbued. Matt Austern's
+ work at SGI will be useful, perhaps directly as a source of code, or
+ at least as an example to draw on.
+
+ Filebuf, almost uniquely (cf. operator new), depends heavily on
+ underlying environmental facilities. In current releases iostream
+ depends fairly heavily on libio constant definitions, but it should
+ be made independent. It also depends on operating system primitives
+ for file operations. There is immense room for optimizations using
+ (e.g.) mmap for reading. The shadow/ directory wraps, besides the
+ standard C headers, the libio.h and unistd.h headers, for use mainly
+ by filebuf. These wrappings have not been completed, though there
+ is scaffolding in place.
+
+ The encapulation of certain C header <cstdio> names presents an
+ interesting problem. It is possible to define an inline std::fprintf()
+ implemented in terms of the 'extern "C"' vfprintf(), but there is no
+ standard vfscanf() to use to implement std::fscanf(). It appears that
+ vfscanf but be re-implemented in C++ for targets where no vfscanf
+ extension has been defined. This is interesting in that it seems
+ to be the only significant case in the C library where this kind of
+ rewriting is necessary. (Of course Glibc provides the vfscanf()
+ extension.) (The functions related to exit() must be rewritten
+ for other reasons.)
+
+
+ Annex D
+ -------
+ Headers: <strstream>
+
+ Annex D defines many non-library features, and many minor
+ modifications to various headers, and a complete header.
+ It is "mostly done", except that the libstdc++-2 <strstream>
+ header has not been adopted into the library, or checked to
+ verify that it matches the draft in those details that were
+ clarified by the committee. Certainly it must at least be
+ moved into the std namespace.
+
+ We still need to wrap all the deprecated features in #if guards
+ so that pedantic compile modes can detect their use.
+
+ Nonstandard Extensions
+ ----------------------
+ Headers: <iostream.h> <strstream.h> <hash> <rbtree>
+ <pthread_alloc> <stdiobuf> (etc.)
+
+ User code has come to depend on a variety of nonstandard components
+ that we must not omit. Much of this code can be adopted from
+ libstdc++-v2 or from the SGI STL. This particularly includes
+ <iostream.h>, <strstream.h>, and various SGI extensions such
+ as <hash_map.h>. Many of these are already placed in the
+ subdirectories ext/ and backward/. (Note that it is better to
+ include them via "<backward/hash_map.h>" or "<ext/hash_map>" than
+ to search the subdirectory itself via a "-I" directive.
+
+
diff --git a/libstdc++-v3/doc/xml/spine.xml b/libstdc++-v3/doc/xml/spine.xml
index df30ad93dc4..32f970a2c11 100644
--- a/libstdc++-v3/doc/xml/spine.xml
+++ b/libstdc++-v3/doc/xml/spine.xml
@@ -6,8 +6,8 @@
]>
-
-
+
+
The GNU C++ Library Documentation