/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 2; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */ /* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */ /* * Miscellaneous uncategorized functionality. Please add new functionality to * new headers, or to other appropriate existing headers, not here. */ #ifndef mozilla_Util_h_ #define mozilla_Util_h_ #include "mozilla/Assertions.h" #include "mozilla/Attributes.h" #include "mozilla/Types.h" #ifdef __cplusplus namespace mozilla { /* * This class, and the corresponding macro MOZ_ALIGNOF, figure out how many * bytes of alignment a given type needs. */ template class AlignmentFinder { struct Aligner { char c; T t; }; public: static const size_t alignment = sizeof(Aligner) - sizeof(T); }; #define MOZ_ALIGNOF(T) mozilla::AlignmentFinder::alignment /* * Declare the MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL macro for declaring aligned types. * * For instance, * * MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL(char arr[2], 8); * * will declare a two-character array |arr| aligned to 8 bytes. */ #if defined(__GNUC__) # define MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL(_type, _align) \ _type __attribute__((aligned(_align))) #elif defined(_MSC_VER) # define MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL(_type, _align) \ __declspec(align(_align)) _type #else # warning "We don't know how to align variables on this compiler." # define MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL(_type, _align) _type #endif /* * AlignedElem is a structure whose alignment is guaranteed to be at least N * bytes. * * We support 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16-bit alignment. */ template struct AlignedElem; /* * We have to specialize this template because GCC doesn't like __attribute__((aligned(foo))) where * foo is a template parameter. */ template<> struct AlignedElem<1> { MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL(uint8_t elem, 1); }; template<> struct AlignedElem<2> { MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL(uint8_t elem, 2); }; template<> struct AlignedElem<4> { MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL(uint8_t elem, 4); }; template<> struct AlignedElem<8> { MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL(uint8_t elem, 8); }; template<> struct AlignedElem<16> { MOZ_ALIGNED_DECL(uint8_t elem, 16); }; /* * This utility pales in comparison to Boost's aligned_storage. The utility * simply assumes that uint64_t is enough alignment for anyone. This may need * to be extended one day... * * As an important side effect, pulling the storage into this template is * enough obfuscation to confuse gcc's strict-aliasing analysis into not giving * false negatives when we cast from the char buffer to whatever type we've * constructed using the bytes. */ template struct AlignedStorage { union U { char bytes[nbytes]; uint64_t _; } u; const void* addr() const { return u.bytes; } void* addr() { return u.bytes; } }; template struct AlignedStorage2 { union U { char bytes[sizeof(T)]; uint64_t _; } u; const T* addr() const { return reinterpret_cast(u.bytes); } T* addr() { return static_cast(static_cast(u.bytes)); } }; /* * Small utility for lazily constructing objects without using dynamic storage. * When a Maybe is constructed, it is |empty()|, i.e., no value of T has * been constructed and no T destructor will be called when the Maybe is * destroyed. Upon calling |construct|, a T object will be constructed with the * given arguments and that object will be destroyed when the owning Maybe * is destroyed. * * N.B. GCC seems to miss some optimizations with Maybe and may generate extra * branches/loads/stores. Use with caution on hot paths. */ template class Maybe { AlignedStorage2 storage; bool constructed; T& asT() { return *storage.addr(); } public: Maybe() { constructed = false; } ~Maybe() { if (constructed) asT().~T(); } bool empty() const { return !constructed; } void construct() { MOZ_ASSERT(!constructed); ::new (storage.addr()) T(); constructed = true; } template void construct(const T1& t1) { MOZ_ASSERT(!constructed); ::new (storage.addr()) T(t1); constructed = true; } template void construct(const T1& t1, const T2& t2) { MOZ_ASSERT(!constructed); ::new (storage.addr()) T(t1, t2); constructed = true; } template void construct(const T1& t1, const T2& t2, const T3& t3) { MOZ_ASSERT(!constructed); ::new (storage.addr()) T(t1, t2, t3); constructed = true; } template void construct(const T1& t1, const T2& t2, const T3& t3, const T4& t4) { MOZ_ASSERT(!constructed); ::new (storage.addr()) T(t1, t2, t3, t4); constructed = true; } T* addr() { MOZ_ASSERT(constructed); return &asT(); } T& ref() { MOZ_ASSERT(constructed); return asT(); } const T& ref() const { MOZ_ASSERT(constructed); return const_cast(this)->asT(); } void destroy() { ref().~T(); constructed = false; } void destroyIfConstructed() { if (!empty()) destroy(); } private: Maybe(const Maybe& other) MOZ_DELETE; const Maybe& operator=(const Maybe& other) MOZ_DELETE; }; /* * Safely subtract two pointers when it is known that end >= begin. This avoids * the common compiler bug that if (size_t(end) - size_t(begin)) has the MSB * set, the unsigned subtraction followed by right shift will produce -1, or * size_t(-1), instead of the real difference. */ template MOZ_ALWAYS_INLINE size_t PointerRangeSize(T* begin, T* end) { MOZ_ASSERT(end >= begin); return (size_t(end) - size_t(begin)) / sizeof(T); } /* * Compute the length of an array with constant length. (Use of this method * with a non-array pointer will not compile.) * * Beware of the implicit trailing '\0' when using this with string constants. */ template size_t ArrayLength(T (&arr)[N]) { return N; } /* * Compute the address one past the last element of a constant-length array. * * Beware of the implicit trailing '\0' when using this with string constants. */ template T* ArrayEnd(T (&arr)[N]) { return arr + ArrayLength(arr); } } /* namespace mozilla */ #endif /* __cplusplus */ /* * MOZ_ARRAY_LENGTH() is an alternative to mozilla::ArrayLength() for C files * that can't use C++ template functions and for MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT() calls that * can't call ArrayLength() when it is not a C++11 constexpr function. */ #define MOZ_ARRAY_LENGTH(array) (sizeof(array)/sizeof((array)[0])) #endif /* mozilla_Util_h_ */