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| 1 | +.. _ABIGuarantees: |
| 2 | + |
| 3 | +======================= |
| 4 | +libc++'s ABI Guarantees |
| 5 | +======================= |
| 6 | + |
| 7 | +libc++ provides multiple types of ABI guarantees. These include stability of the layout of structs, the linking of TUs |
| 8 | +built against different versions and configurations of the library, and more. This document describes what guarantees |
| 9 | +libc++ provides in these different areas as well as what options exist for vendors to affect these guarantees. |
| 10 | + |
| 11 | +Note that all of the guarantees listed below come with an asterisk that there may be circumstances where we deem it |
| 12 | +worth it to break that guarantee. These breaks are communicated to vendors by CCing #libcxx-vendors on GitHub. If you |
| 13 | +are a vendor, please ask to be added to that group to be notified about changes that potentially affect you. |
| 14 | + |
| 15 | +ABI flags |
| 16 | +========= |
| 17 | +All the ABI flags listed below can be added to the ``__config_site`` header by the vendor to opt in to an ABI breaking |
| 18 | +change. These flags should never be set by the user. When porting libc++ to a new platform, vendord should consider |
| 19 | +which flags to enable, assuming that ABI stability is relevant to them. Please contact the libc++ team on Discord or |
| 20 | +through other means to be able to make an informed decision on which flags make sense to enable, and to avoid enabling |
| 21 | +flags which may not be stable. Flags can be enabled via the ``LIBCXX_ABI_DEFINES`` CMake option. |
| 22 | + |
| 23 | + |
| 24 | +Stability of the Layout of Structs |
| 25 | +================================== |
| 26 | + |
| 27 | +The layout of any user-observable struct is kept stable across versions of the library and any user-facing options |
| 28 | +documented :ref:`here <libcxx-configuration-macros>`. There are a lot of structs that have internal names, but are none |
| 29 | +the less observable by users; for example through public aliases to these types or because they affect the layout of |
| 30 | +other types. |
| 31 | + |
| 32 | +There are multiple ABI flags which affect the layout of certain structs: |
| 33 | + |
| 34 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_ALTERNATE_STRING_LAYOUT`` |
| 35 | +--------------------------------------- |
| 36 | +This changes the internal layout of ``basic_string`` to move the section that is used for the internal buffer to the |
| 37 | +front, making it eight byte aligned instead of being unaligned, improving the performance of some operations |
| 38 | +significantly. |
| 39 | + |
| 40 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_NO_ITERATOR_BASES`` |
| 41 | +--------------------------------- |
| 42 | +This removes the ``iterator`` base class from ``back_insert_iterator``, ``front_insert_iterator``, ``insert_iterator``, |
| 43 | +``istream_iterator``, ``ostream_iterator``, ``ostreambuf_itreator``, ``reverse_iterator``, and ``raw_storage_iterator``. |
| 44 | +This doesn't directly affect the layout of these types in most cases, but may result in more padding being used when |
| 45 | +they are used in combination, for example ``reverse_iterator<reverse_iterator<T>>``. |
| 46 | + |
| 47 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_VARIANT_INDEX_TYPE_OPTIMIZATION`` |
| 48 | +------------------------------------------------- |
| 49 | +This changes the index type used inside ``variant`` to the smallest required type to reduce the datasize of variants in |
| 50 | +most cases. |
| 51 | + |
| 52 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_OPTIMIZED_FUNCTION`` |
| 53 | +---------------------------------- |
| 54 | +This significantly restructures how ``function`` is written to provide better performance, but is currently not ABI |
| 55 | +stable. |
| 56 | + |
| 57 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_NO_RANDOM_DEVICE_COMPATIBILITY_LAYOUT`` |
| 58 | +----------------------------------------------------- |
| 59 | +This changes the layout of ``random_device`` to only holds state with an implementation that gets entropy from a file |
| 60 | +(see ``_LIBCPP_USING_DEV_RANDOM``). When switching from this implementation to another one on a platform that has |
| 61 | +already shipped ``random_device``, one needs to retain the same object layout to remain ABI compatible. This flag |
| 62 | +removes these workarounds for platforms that don't care about ABI compatibility. |
| 63 | + |
| 64 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_NO_COMPRESSED_PAIR_PADDING`` |
| 65 | +------------------------------------------ |
| 66 | +This removes artifical padding from ``_LIBCPP_COMPRESSED_PAIR`` and ``_LIBCPP_COMPRESSED_TRIPLE``. |
| 67 | + |
| 68 | +These macros are used inside the associative and unordered containers, ``deque``, ``forward_list``, ``future``, |
| 69 | +``list``, ``basic_string``, ``function``, ``shared_ptr``, ``unique_ptr``, and ``vector`` to stay ABI compatible with the |
| 70 | +legacy ``__compressed_pair`` type. ``__compressed_pair`` had historically been used to reduce storage requirements in |
| 71 | +the case of empty types, but has been replaced by ``[[no_unique_address]]``. ``[[no_unique_address]]`` is significantly |
| 72 | +lighter in terms of compile time and debug information, and also improves the layout of structs further. However, to |
| 73 | +keep ABI stability, the additional improvements in layout had to be reverted by introducing artificial padding. This |
| 74 | +flag removes that artificial padding. |
| 75 | + |
| 76 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_IOS_ALLOW_ARBITRARY_FILL_VALUE`` |
| 77 | +---------------------------------------------- |
| 78 | +``basic_ios`` uses ``WEOF`` to indicate that the fill value is uninitialized. However, on platforms where the size of |
| 79 | +``char_type`` is equal to or greater than the size of ``int_type`` and ``char_type`` is unsigned, |
| 80 | +``char_traits<char_type>::eq_int_type()`` cannot distinguish between ``WEOF`` and ``WCHAR_MAX``. This flag changes |
| 81 | +``basic_ios`` to instead track whether the fill value has been initialized using a separate boolean. |
| 82 | + |
| 83 | + |
| 84 | +Linking TUs which have been compiled against different releases of libc++ |
| 85 | +========================================================================= |
| 86 | +libc++ supports linking TUs which have beeen compiled against different releases of libc++ by marking symbols with |
| 87 | +hidden visibility and changing the mangling of header-only functions in every release. |
| 88 | + |
| 89 | + |
| 90 | +Linking TUs which have been compiled with different flags affecting code gen |
| 91 | +============================================================================ |
| 92 | +There are a lot of compiler (and library) flags which change the code generated for functions. This includes flags like |
| 93 | +``-O1``, which are guaranteed by the compiler to not change the observable behaviour of a correct program, as well as |
| 94 | +flags like ``-fexceptions``, which **do** change the observable behaviour. libc++ allows linking of TUs which have been |
| 95 | +compiled whith specific flags only and makes no guarantees for any of the flags not listed below. |
| 96 | + |
| 97 | +The flags allowed (in any combination) are: |
| 98 | +- ``-f[no-]exceptions`` |
| 99 | +- ``-D_LIBCPP_HARDENING_MODE=_LIBCPP_HARDENING_MODE{_FAST,_EXTENSIVE,_DEBUG,_NONE}`` |
| 100 | + |
| 101 | +Note that this does not provide any guarantees about user-defined functions, but only that the libc++ functions linked |
| 102 | +behave as the flags say. |
| 103 | + |
| 104 | + |
| 105 | +Availability of symbols in the built library (both static and shared) |
| 106 | +===================================================================== |
| 107 | +In general, libc++ does not make any guarantees about forwards-compability. That is, a TU compiled against new headers |
| 108 | +may not work with an older library. Vendors who require such support can leverage availability markup. On the other |
| 109 | +hand, backwards compatibility is generally guaranteed. |
| 110 | + |
| 111 | +There are multiple ABI flags that change the symbols exported from the built library: |
| 112 | + |
| 113 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_DO_NOT_EXPORT_BASIC_STRING_COMMON`` |
| 114 | +------------------------------------------------- |
| 115 | +This removes ``__basic_string_common<true>::__throw_length_error()`` and |
| 116 | +``__basic_string_common<true>::__throw_out_of_range()``. These symbols have been used by ``basic_string`` in the past, |
| 117 | +but are not referenced from the headers anymore. |
| 118 | + |
| 119 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_DO_NOT_EXPORT_VECTOR_BASE_COMMON`` |
| 120 | +------------------------------------------------ |
| 121 | +This removes ``__vector_base_common<true>::__throw_length_error()`` and |
| 122 | +``__vector_base_common<true>::__throw_out_of_range()``. These symbols have been used by ``vector`` in the past, but are |
| 123 | +not referenced from the headers anymore. |
| 124 | + |
| 125 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_DO_NOT_EXPORT_TO_CHARS_BASE_10`` |
| 126 | +---------------------------------------------- |
| 127 | +This removes ``__itoa::__u32toa()`` and ``__iota::__u64toa``. These symbols have been used by ``to_chars`` in the past, |
| 128 | +but are not referenced from the headers anymore. |
| 129 | + |
| 130 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_STRING_OPTIMIZED_EXTERNAL_INSTANTIATION`` |
| 131 | +------------------------------------------------------- |
| 132 | +This replaces the symbols that are exported for ``basic_string`` to avoid exporting functions which are likely to be |
| 133 | +inlined as well as explicitly moving paths to the built library which are slow, improving fast-path inlining of multiple |
| 134 | +functions. This flag is currently unstable. |
| 135 | + |
| 136 | + |
| 137 | +Stability of the traits of a type |
| 138 | +================================= |
| 139 | +Whether a particular trait of a type is kept stable depends heavily on the type in question and the trait. The most |
| 140 | +important trait of a type to keep stable is the triviality for the purpose of calls, since that directly affects the |
| 141 | +function call ABI. Which types are considered non-trivial for the purpose of calls is defined in the |
| 142 | +`Itanium ABI <https://itanium-cxx-abi.github.io/cxx-abi/abi.html#definitions>`_. |
| 143 | +``is_trivially_copyable`` should also be kept stable usually, since many programs depend on this trait for their own |
| 144 | +layouting. This isn't as rigid as the previous requirement though. |
| 145 | + |
| 146 | +There are multiple ABI flags that change traits of a struct: |
| 147 | + |
| 148 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_ENABLE_UNIQUE_PTR_TRIVIAL_ABI`` |
| 149 | +--------------------------------------------- |
| 150 | +This flag adds ``[[clang::trivial_abi]]`` to ``unique_ptr``, which makes it trivial for the purpose of calls. |
| 151 | + |
| 152 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_ENABLE_SHARED_PTR_TRIVIAL_ABI`` |
| 153 | +--------------------------------------------- |
| 154 | +This flag adds ``[[clang::trivial_abi]]`` to ``shared_ptr``, which makes it trivial for the purpose of calls. |
| 155 | + |
| 156 | + |
| 157 | +Types that public aliases reference |
| 158 | +=================================== |
| 159 | +There are a lot of aliases that reference types with library internal names. For example, containers contain an |
| 160 | +``iterator`` alias to a type with a library internal name. These have to always reference the same type, since the |
| 161 | +mangling of user-defined function overloads would change otherwise. A notable exception to this are the alias templates |
| 162 | +to type traits. There doesn't seem to be anybody who relies on these names staying the same, so it is OK to change what |
| 163 | +these aliases actually reference. |
| 164 | + |
| 165 | +There are multiple ABI flags which change which type an alias references: |
| 166 | + |
| 167 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_INCOMPLETE_TYPES_IN_DEQUE`` |
| 168 | +----------------------------------------- |
| 169 | +This changes ``deque::iterator`` to avoid requring complete types for ``deque``. |
| 170 | + |
| 171 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_FIX_UNORDERED_CONTAINER_SIZE_TYPE`` |
| 172 | +------------------------------------------------- |
| 173 | +This changes the unordered container's ``size_types`` aliases. |
| 174 | + |
| 175 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_USE_WRAP_ITER_IN_STD_ARRAY`` and ``_LIBCPP_ABI_USE_WRAP_ITER_IN_STD_STRING_VIEW`` |
| 176 | +----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 177 | +This changes the ``iterator`` and ``const_iterator`` of ``array`` and ``string_view`` respectively to reference |
| 178 | +``__wrap_iter`` instead, which makes it less likely for users to depend on non-portable implementation details. This is |
| 179 | +especially useful because enabling bounded iterators hardening requires code not to make these assumptions. |
| 180 | + |
| 181 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_BOUNDED_ITERATORS``, ``_LIBCPP_ABI_BOUNDED_ITERATORS_IN_STRING``, ``_LIBCPP_ABI_BOUNDED_ITERATORS_IN_VECTOR``, and ``_LIBCPP_ABI_BOUNDED_ITERATORS_IN_STD_ARRAY`` |
| 182 | +------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 183 | +These flags change the ``iterator`` member of various classes to reference hardened iterators instead. See the |
| 184 | +:ref:`hardening documentation <hardening>` for more details. |
| 185 | + |
| 186 | + |
| 187 | +Meaning of values |
| 188 | +================= |
| 189 | +The meaning of specific values can usually not be changed, since programs compiled against older versions of the headers |
| 190 | +may check for these values. These specific values don't have to be hard-coded, but can also depend on user input. |
| 191 | + |
| 192 | +There are multiple ABI flags that change the meaning of particular values: |
| 193 | + |
| 194 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_REGEX_CONSTANTS_NONZERO`` |
| 195 | +--------------------------------------- |
| 196 | +This changes the value of ``regex_constants::syntax_option-type::ECMAScript`` to be standards-conforming. |
| 197 | + |
| 198 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_FIX_CITYHASH_IMPLEMENTATION`` |
| 199 | +------------------------------------------- |
| 200 | +This flag fixes the implementation of CityHash used for ``hash<fundamental-type>``. The incorrect implementation of |
| 201 | +CityHash has the roblem that it drops some bits on the floor. Fixing the implementation changes the hash of values, |
| 202 | +resulting in an ABI break. |
| 203 | + |
| 204 | +inline namespaces |
| 205 | +================= |
| 206 | +Inline namespaces which contain types that are observable by the user need to be kept the same, since they affect |
| 207 | +mangling. Almost all of libc++'s symbols are inside an inline namespace. By default that namespace is ``__1``, but can |
| 208 | +be changed by the vendor by setting `LIBCXX_ABI_NAMESPACE` during CMake configuration. There is also |
| 209 | +``_LIBCPP_ABI_NO_FILESYSTEM_INLINE_NAMESPACE`` to remove the ``__fs`` namespace from surrounding the ``filesystem`` |
| 210 | +namespace. This shortens the mangling of the filesystem symbols a bit. |
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