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Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +00001============
2Using libc++
3============
4
5.. contents::
6 :local:
7
8Getting Started
9===============
10
11If you already have libc++ installed you can use it with clang.
12
13.. code-block:: bash
14
15 $ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ test.cpp
16 $ clang++ -std=c++11 -stdlib=libc++ test.cpp
17
18On OS X and FreeBSD libc++ is the default standard library
19and the ``-stdlib=libc++`` is not required.
20
21.. _alternate libcxx:
22
23If you want to select an alternate installation of libc++ you
24can use the following options.
25
26.. code-block:: bash
27
28 $ clang++ -std=c++11 -stdlib=libc++ -nostdinc++ \
29 -I<libcxx-install-prefix>/include/c++/v1 \
30 -L<libcxx-install-prefix>/lib \
31 -Wl,-rpath,<libcxx-install-prefix>/lib \
32 test.cpp
33
34The option ``-Wl,-rpath,<libcxx-install-prefix>/lib`` adds a runtime library
35search path. Meaning that the systems dynamic linker will look for libc++ in
36``<libcxx-install-prefix>/lib`` whenever the program is run. Alternatively the
37environment variable ``LD_LIBRARY_PATH`` (``DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH`` on OS X) can
38be used to change the dynamic linkers search paths after a program is compiled.
39
40An example of using ``LD_LIBRARY_PATH``:
41
42.. code-block:: bash
43
44 $ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ -nostdinc++ \
45 -I<libcxx-install-prefix>/include/c++/v1
46 -L<libcxx-install-prefix>/lib \
47 test.cpp -o
48 $ ./a.out # Searches for libc++ in the systems library paths.
49 $ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=<libcxx-install-prefix>/lib
50 $ ./a.out # Searches for libc++ along LD_LIBRARY_PATH
51
Eric Fiselier02cea5e2018-07-27 03:07:09 +000052
53Using ``<filesystem>`` and libc++fs
54====================================
55
56Libc++ provides the implementation of the filesystem library in a separate
57library. Users of ``<filesystem>`` and ``<experimental/filesystem>`` are
58required to link ``-lc++fs``.
59
60.. note::
61 Prior to libc++ 7.0, users of ``<experimental/filesystem>`` were required
62 to link libc++experimental.
63
64.. warning::
65 The Filesystem library is still experimental in nature. As such normal
66 guarantees about ABI stability and backwards compatibility do not yet apply
67 to it. In the future, this restriction will be removed.
68
69
Eric Fiselierfa43a5c2016-05-03 22:32:08 +000070Using libc++experimental and ``<experimental/...>``
71=====================================================
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000072
Eric Fiselierfa43a5c2016-05-03 22:32:08 +000073Libc++ provides implementations of experimental technical specifications
74in a separate library, ``libc++experimental.a``. Users of ``<experimental/...>``
Eric Fiselierec46d402016-05-06 04:49:30 +000075headers may be required to link ``-lc++experimental``.
Eric Fiselierfa43a5c2016-05-03 22:32:08 +000076
77.. code-block:: bash
78
79 $ clang++ -std=c++14 -stdlib=libc++ test.cpp -lc++experimental
80
81Libc++experimental.a may not always be available, even when libc++ is already
82installed. For information on building libc++experimental from source see
83:ref:`Building Libc++ <build instructions>` and
84:ref:`libc++experimental CMake Options <libc++experimental options>`.
85
Eric Fiselier02cea5e2018-07-27 03:07:09 +000086Note that as of libc++ 7.0 using the ``<experimental/filesystem>`` requires linking
87libc++fs instead of libc++experimental.
88
Eric Fiselierfa43a5c2016-05-03 22:32:08 +000089Also see the `Experimental Library Implementation Status <http://libcxx.llvm.org/ts1z_status.html>`__
90page.
91
92.. warning::
93 Experimental libraries are Experimental.
94 * The contents of the ``<experimental/...>`` headers and ``libc++experimental.a``
95 library will not remain compatible between versions.
96 * No guarantees of API or ABI stability are provided.
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000097
98Using libc++ on Linux
99=====================
100
Eric Fiselier0b09dd12015-10-15 22:41:51 +0000101On Linux libc++ can typically be used with only '-stdlib=libc++'. However
102some libc++ installations require the user manually link libc++abi themselves.
103If you are running into linker errors when using libc++ try adding '-lc++abi'
104to the link line. For example:
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +0000105
106.. code-block:: bash
107
108 $ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ test.cpp -lc++ -lc++abi -lm -lc -lgcc_s -lgcc
109
110Alternately, you could just add libc++abi to your libraries list, which in
111most situations will give the same result:
112
113.. code-block:: bash
114
115 $ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ test.cpp -lc++abi
116
117
118Using libc++ with GCC
119---------------------
120
121GCC does not provide a way to switch from libstdc++ to libc++. You must manually
122configure the compile and link commands.
123
124In particular you must tell GCC to remove the libstdc++ include directories
125using ``-nostdinc++`` and to not link libstdc++.so using ``-nodefaultlibs``.
126
127Note that ``-nodefaultlibs`` removes all of the standard system libraries and
128not just libstdc++ so they must be manually linked. For example:
129
130.. code-block:: bash
131
132 $ g++ -nostdinc++ -I<libcxx-install-prefix>/include/c++/v1 \
133 test.cpp -nodefaultlibs -lc++ -lc++abi -lm -lc -lgcc_s -lgcc
Eric Fiselier41ee4312016-01-20 01:26:30 +0000134
135
136GDB Pretty printers for libc++
137------------------------------
138
139GDB does not support pretty-printing of libc++ symbols by default. Unfortunately
140libc++ does not provide pretty-printers itself. However there are 3rd
141party implementations available and although they are not officially
142supported by libc++ they may be useful to users.
143
144Known 3rd Party Implementations Include:
145
146* `Koutheir's libc++ pretty-printers <https://github.com/koutheir/libcxx-pretty-printers>`_.
Eric Fiselierb3825302016-11-13 23:00:30 +0000147
148
149Libc++ Configuration Macros
150===========================
151
152Libc++ provides a number of configuration macros which can be used to enable
153or disable extended libc++ behavior, including enabling "debug mode" or
154thread safety annotations.
155
156**_LIBCPP_DEBUG**:
Eric Fiselierfb825432016-12-28 04:58:52 +0000157 See :ref:`using-debug-mode` for more information.
Eric Fiselierb3825302016-11-13 23:00:30 +0000158
159**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_THREAD_SAFETY_ANNOTATIONS**:
160 This macro is used to enable -Wthread-safety annotations on libc++'s
161 ``std::mutex`` and ``std::lock_guard``. By default these annotations are
162 disabled and must be manually enabled by the user.
Shoaib Meenaif36e9882016-12-05 19:40:12 +0000163
164**_LIBCPP_DISABLE_VISIBILITY_ANNOTATIONS**:
165 This macro is used to disable all visibility annotations inside libc++.
166 Defining this macro and then building libc++ with hidden visibility gives a
167 build of libc++ which does not export any symbols, which can be useful when
168 building statically for inclusion into another library.
Eric Fiselier41b686e2016-12-08 23:57:08 +0000169
Shoaib Meenai2ba461c2017-04-13 20:13:32 +0000170**_LIBCPP_DISABLE_EXTERN_TEMPLATE**:
171 This macro is used to disable extern template declarations in the libc++
172 headers. The intended use case is for clients who wish to use the libc++
173 headers without taking a dependency on the libc++ library itself.
174
Eric Fiselier41b686e2016-12-08 23:57:08 +0000175**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_TUPLE_IMPLICIT_REDUCED_ARITY_EXTENSION**:
176 This macro is used to re-enable an extension in `std::tuple` which allowed
177 it to be implicitly constructed from fewer initializers than contained
178 elements. Elements without an initializer are default constructed. For example:
179
180 .. code-block:: cpp
181
182 std::tuple<std::string, int, std::error_code> foo() {
183 return {"hello world", 42}; // default constructs error_code
184 }
185
186
187 Since libc++ 4.0 this extension has been disabled by default. This macro
188 may be defined to re-enable it in order to support existing code that depends
189 on the extension. New use of this extension should be discouraged.
190 See `PR 27374 <http://llvm.org/PR27374>`_ for more information.
191
192 Note: The "reduced-arity-initialization" extension is still offered but only
193 for explicit conversions. Example:
194
195 .. code-block:: cpp
196
197 auto foo() {
198 using Tup = std::tuple<std::string, int, std::error_code>;
199 return Tup{"hello world", 42}; // explicit constructor called. OK.
200 }
Eric Fiselierd0f7cc02016-12-09 12:32:02 +0000201
Eric Fiseliera7a14ed2017-01-13 22:02:08 +0000202**_LIBCPP_DISABLE_ADDITIONAL_DIAGNOSTICS**:
203 This macro disables the additional diagnostics generated by libc++ using the
204 `diagnose_if` attribute. These additional diagnostics include checks for:
205
206 * Giving `set`, `map`, `multiset`, `multimap` a comparator which is not
207 const callable.
208
Shoaib Meenaicfd19602017-10-09 19:25:17 +0000209**_LIBCPP_NO_VCRUNTIME**:
210 Microsoft's C and C++ headers are fairly entangled, and some of their C++
211 headers are fairly hard to avoid. In particular, `vcruntime_new.h` gets pulled
212 in from a lot of other headers and provides definitions which clash with
213 libc++ headers, such as `nothrow_t` (note that `nothrow_t` is a struct, so
214 there's no way for libc++ to provide a compatible definition, since you can't
215 have multiple definitions).
216
217 By default, libc++ solves this problem by deferring to Microsoft's vcruntime
218 headers where needed. However, it may be undesirable to depend on vcruntime
219 headers, since they may not always be available in cross-compilation setups,
220 or they may clash with other headers. The `_LIBCPP_NO_VCRUNTIME` macro
221 prevents libc++ from depending on vcruntime headers. Consequently, it also
222 prevents libc++ headers from being interoperable with vcruntime headers (from
223 the aforementioned clashes), so users of this macro are promising to not
224 attempt to combine libc++ headers with the problematic vcruntime headers. This
225 macro also currently prevents certain `operator new`/`operator delete`
226 replacement scenarios from working, e.g. replacing `operator new` and
227 expecting a non-replaced `operator new[]` to call the replaced `operator new`.
228
Eric Fiselierddd77792017-02-17 03:25:08 +0000229C++17 Specific Configuration Macros
230-----------------------------------
231**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_FEATURES**:
232 This macro is used to re-enable all the features removed in C++17. The effect
233 is equivalent to manually defining each macro listed below.
234
235**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_UNEXPECTED_FUNCTIONS**:
236 This macro is used to re-enable the `set_unexpected`, `get_unexpected`, and
Eric Fiselier65d5b4c2017-02-17 03:30:25 +0000237 `unexpected` functions, which were removed in C++17.
238
239**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_AUTO_PTR**:
240 This macro is used to re-enable `std::auto_ptr` in C++17.