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      1 // Copyright 2014 the V8 project authors. All rights reserved.
      2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
      3 // found in the LICENSE file.
      4 
      5 #ifndef V8_BASE_MACROS_H_
      6 #define V8_BASE_MACROS_H_
      7 
      8 #include <cstring>
      9 
     10 #include "include/v8stdint.h"
     11 #include "src/base/build_config.h"
     12 #include "src/base/compiler-specific.h"
     13 #include "src/base/logging.h"
     14 
     15 
     16 // The expression OFFSET_OF(type, field) computes the byte-offset
     17 // of the specified field relative to the containing type. This
     18 // corresponds to 'offsetof' (in stddef.h), except that it doesn't
     19 // use 0 or NULL, which causes a problem with the compiler warnings
     20 // we have enabled (which is also why 'offsetof' doesn't seem to work).
     21 // Here we simply use the non-zero value 4, which seems to work.
     22 #define OFFSET_OF(type, field)                                          \
     23   (reinterpret_cast<intptr_t>(&(reinterpret_cast<type*>(4)->field)) - 4)
     24 
     25 
     26 // ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE performs essentially the same calculation as arraysize,
     27 // but can be used on anonymous types or types defined inside
     28 // functions.  It's less safe than arraysize as it accepts some
     29 // (although not all) pointers.  Therefore, you should use arraysize
     30 // whenever possible.
     31 //
     32 // The expression ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE(a) is a compile-time constant of type
     33 // size_t.
     34 //
     35 // ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE catches a few type errors.  If you see a compiler error
     36 //
     37 //   "warning: division by zero in ..."
     38 //
     39 // when using ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE, you are (wrongfully) giving it a pointer.
     40 // You should only use ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE on statically allocated arrays.
     41 //
     42 // The following comments are on the implementation details, and can
     43 // be ignored by the users.
     44 //
     45 // ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE(arr) works by inspecting sizeof(arr) (the # of bytes in
     46 // the array) and sizeof(*(arr)) (the # of bytes in one array
     47 // element).  If the former is divisible by the latter, perhaps arr is
     48 // indeed an array, in which case the division result is the # of
     49 // elements in the array.  Otherwise, arr cannot possibly be an array,
     50 // and we generate a compiler error to prevent the code from
     51 // compiling.
     52 //
     53 // Since the size of bool is implementation-defined, we need to cast
     54 // !(sizeof(a) & sizeof(*(a))) to size_t in order to ensure the final
     55 // result has type size_t.
     56 //
     57 // This macro is not perfect as it wrongfully accepts certain
     58 // pointers, namely where the pointer size is divisible by the pointee
     59 // size.  Since all our code has to go through a 32-bit compiler,
     60 // where a pointer is 4 bytes, this means all pointers to a type whose
     61 // size is 3 or greater than 4 will be (righteously) rejected.
     62 #define ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE(a)     \
     63   ((sizeof(a) / sizeof(*(a))) / \
     64    static_cast<size_t>(!(sizeof(a) % sizeof(*(a)))))  // NOLINT
     65 
     66 
     67 #if V8_OS_NACL
     68 
     69 // TODO(bmeurer): For some reason, the NaCl toolchain cannot handle the correct
     70 // definition of arraysize() below, so we have to use the unsafe version for
     71 // now.
     72 #define arraysize ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE
     73 
     74 #else  // V8_OS_NACL
     75 
     76 // The arraysize(arr) macro returns the # of elements in an array arr.
     77 // The expression is a compile-time constant, and therefore can be
     78 // used in defining new arrays, for example.  If you use arraysize on
     79 // a pointer by mistake, you will get a compile-time error.
     80 //
     81 // One caveat is that arraysize() doesn't accept any array of an
     82 // anonymous type or a type defined inside a function.  In these rare
     83 // cases, you have to use the unsafe ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE() macro below.  This is
     84 // due to a limitation in C++'s template system.  The limitation might
     85 // eventually be removed, but it hasn't happened yet.
     86 #define arraysize(array) (sizeof(ArraySizeHelper(array)))
     87 
     88 
     89 // This template function declaration is used in defining arraysize.
     90 // Note that the function doesn't need an implementation, as we only
     91 // use its type.
     92 template <typename T, size_t N>
     93 char (&ArraySizeHelper(T (&array)[N]))[N];
     94 
     95 
     96 #if !V8_CC_MSVC
     97 // That gcc wants both of these prototypes seems mysterious. VC, for
     98 // its part, can't decide which to use (another mystery). Matching of
     99 // template overloads: the final frontier.
    100 template <typename T, size_t N>
    101 char (&ArraySizeHelper(const T (&array)[N]))[N];
    102 #endif
    103 
    104 #endif  // V8_OS_NACL
    105 
    106 
    107 // The COMPILE_ASSERT macro can be used to verify that a compile time
    108 // expression is true. For example, you could use it to verify the
    109 // size of a static array:
    110 //
    111 //   COMPILE_ASSERT(ARRAYSIZE_UNSAFE(content_type_names) == CONTENT_NUM_TYPES,
    112 //                  content_type_names_incorrect_size);
    113 //
    114 // or to make sure a struct is smaller than a certain size:
    115 //
    116 //   COMPILE_ASSERT(sizeof(foo) < 128, foo_too_large);
    117 //
    118 // The second argument to the macro is the name of the variable. If
    119 // the expression is false, most compilers will issue a warning/error
    120 // containing the name of the variable.
    121 #if V8_HAS_CXX11_STATIC_ASSERT
    122 
    123 // Under C++11, just use static_assert.
    124 #define COMPILE_ASSERT(expr, msg) static_assert(expr, #msg)
    125 
    126 #else
    127 
    128 template <bool>
    129 struct CompileAssert {};
    130 
    131 #define COMPILE_ASSERT(expr, msg)                \
    132   typedef CompileAssert<static_cast<bool>(expr)> \
    133       msg[static_cast<bool>(expr) ? 1 : -1] ALLOW_UNUSED
    134 
    135 // Implementation details of COMPILE_ASSERT:
    136 //
    137 // - COMPILE_ASSERT works by defining an array type that has -1
    138 //   elements (and thus is invalid) when the expression is false.
    139 //
    140 // - The simpler definition
    141 //
    142 //     #define COMPILE_ASSERT(expr, msg) typedef char msg[(expr) ? 1 : -1]
    143 //
    144 //   does not work, as gcc supports variable-length arrays whose sizes
    145 //   are determined at run-time (this is gcc's extension and not part
    146 //   of the C++ standard).  As a result, gcc fails to reject the
    147 //   following code with the simple definition:
    148 //
    149 //     int foo;
    150 //     COMPILE_ASSERT(foo, msg); // not supposed to compile as foo is
    151 //                               // not a compile-time constant.
    152 //
    153 // - By using the type CompileAssert<(bool(expr))>, we ensures that
    154 //   expr is a compile-time constant.  (Template arguments must be
    155 //   determined at compile-time.)
    156 //
    157 // - The outer parentheses in CompileAssert<(bool(expr))> are necessary
    158 //   to work around a bug in gcc 3.4.4 and 4.0.1.  If we had written
    159 //
    160 //     CompileAssert<bool(expr)>
    161 //
    162 //   instead, these compilers will refuse to compile
    163 //
    164 //     COMPILE_ASSERT(5 > 0, some_message);
    165 //
    166 //   (They seem to think the ">" in "5 > 0" marks the end of the
    167 //   template argument list.)
    168 //
    169 // - The array size is (bool(expr) ? 1 : -1), instead of simply
    170 //
    171 //     ((expr) ? 1 : -1).
    172 //
    173 //   This is to avoid running into a bug in MS VC 7.1, which
    174 //   causes ((0.0) ? 1 : -1) to incorrectly evaluate to 1.
    175 
    176 #endif
    177 
    178 
    179 // bit_cast<Dest,Source> is a template function that implements the
    180 // equivalent of "*reinterpret_cast<Dest*>(&source)".  We need this in
    181 // very low-level functions like the protobuf library and fast math
    182 // support.
    183 //
    184 //   float f = 3.14159265358979;
    185 //   int i = bit_cast<int32>(f);
    186 //   // i = 0x40490fdb
    187 //
    188 // The classical address-casting method is:
    189 //
    190 //   // WRONG
    191 //   float f = 3.14159265358979;            // WRONG
    192 //   int i = * reinterpret_cast<int*>(&f);  // WRONG
    193 //
    194 // The address-casting method actually produces undefined behavior
    195 // according to ISO C++ specification section 3.10 -15 -.  Roughly, this
    196 // section says: if an object in memory has one type, and a program
    197 // accesses it with a different type, then the result is undefined
    198 // behavior for most values of "different type".
    199 //
    200 // This is true for any cast syntax, either *(int*)&f or
    201 // *reinterpret_cast<int*>(&f).  And it is particularly true for
    202 // conversions between integral lvalues and floating-point lvalues.
    203 //
    204 // The purpose of 3.10 -15- is to allow optimizing compilers to assume
    205 // that expressions with different types refer to different memory.  gcc
    206 // 4.0.1 has an optimizer that takes advantage of this.  So a
    207 // non-conforming program quietly produces wildly incorrect output.
    208 //
    209 // The problem is not the use of reinterpret_cast.  The problem is type
    210 // punning: holding an object in memory of one type and reading its bits
    211 // back using a different type.
    212 //
    213 // The C++ standard is more subtle and complex than this, but that
    214 // is the basic idea.
    215 //
    216 // Anyways ...
    217 //
    218 // bit_cast<> calls memcpy() which is blessed by the standard,
    219 // especially by the example in section 3.9 .  Also, of course,
    220 // bit_cast<> wraps up the nasty logic in one place.
    221 //
    222 // Fortunately memcpy() is very fast.  In optimized mode, with a
    223 // constant size, gcc 2.95.3, gcc 4.0.1, and msvc 7.1 produce inline
    224 // code with the minimal amount of data movement.  On a 32-bit system,
    225 // memcpy(d,s,4) compiles to one load and one store, and memcpy(d,s,8)
    226 // compiles to two loads and two stores.
    227 //
    228 // I tested this code with gcc 2.95.3, gcc 4.0.1, icc 8.1, and msvc 7.1.
    229 //
    230 // WARNING: if Dest or Source is a non-POD type, the result of the memcpy
    231 // is likely to surprise you.
    232 template <class Dest, class Source>
    233 V8_INLINE Dest bit_cast(Source const& source) {
    234   COMPILE_ASSERT(sizeof(Dest) == sizeof(Source), VerifySizesAreEqual);
    235 
    236   Dest dest;
    237   memcpy(&dest, &source, sizeof(dest));
    238   return dest;
    239 }
    240 
    241 
    242 // A macro to disallow the evil copy constructor and operator= functions
    243 // This should be used in the private: declarations for a class
    244 #define DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(TypeName)  \
    245   TypeName(const TypeName&) V8_DELETE;      \
    246   void operator=(const TypeName&) V8_DELETE
    247 
    248 
    249 // A macro to disallow all the implicit constructors, namely the
    250 // default constructor, copy constructor and operator= functions.
    251 //
    252 // This should be used in the private: declarations for a class
    253 // that wants to prevent anyone from instantiating it. This is
    254 // especially useful for classes containing only static methods.
    255 #define DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS(TypeName)  \
    256   TypeName() V8_DELETE;                           \
    257   DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(TypeName)
    258 
    259 
    260 // Newly written code should use V8_INLINE and V8_NOINLINE directly.
    261 #define INLINE(declarator)    V8_INLINE declarator
    262 #define NO_INLINE(declarator) V8_NOINLINE declarator
    263 
    264 
    265 // Newly written code should use WARN_UNUSED_RESULT.
    266 #define MUST_USE_RESULT WARN_UNUSED_RESULT
    267 
    268 
    269 // Define V8_USE_ADDRESS_SANITIZER macros.
    270 #if defined(__has_feature)
    271 #if __has_feature(address_sanitizer)
    272 #define V8_USE_ADDRESS_SANITIZER 1
    273 #endif
    274 #endif
    275 
    276 // Define DISABLE_ASAN macros.
    277 #ifdef V8_USE_ADDRESS_SANITIZER
    278 #define DISABLE_ASAN __attribute__((no_sanitize_address))
    279 #else
    280 #define DISABLE_ASAN
    281 #endif
    282 
    283 
    284 #if V8_CC_GNU
    285 #define V8_IMMEDIATE_CRASH() __builtin_trap()
    286 #else
    287 #define V8_IMMEDIATE_CRASH() ((void(*)())0)()
    288 #endif
    289 
    290 
    291 // Use C++11 static_assert if possible, which gives error
    292 // messages that are easier to understand on first sight.
    293 #if V8_HAS_CXX11_STATIC_ASSERT
    294 #define STATIC_ASSERT(test) static_assert(test, #test)
    295 #else
    296 // This is inspired by the static assertion facility in boost.  This
    297 // is pretty magical.  If it causes you trouble on a platform you may
    298 // find a fix in the boost code.
    299 template <bool> class StaticAssertion;
    300 template <> class StaticAssertion<true> { };
    301 // This macro joins two tokens.  If one of the tokens is a macro the
    302 // helper call causes it to be resolved before joining.
    303 #define SEMI_STATIC_JOIN(a, b) SEMI_STATIC_JOIN_HELPER(a, b)
    304 #define SEMI_STATIC_JOIN_HELPER(a, b) a##b
    305 // Causes an error during compilation of the condition is not
    306 // statically known to be true.  It is formulated as a typedef so that
    307 // it can be used wherever a typedef can be used.  Beware that this
    308 // actually causes each use to introduce a new defined type with a
    309 // name depending on the source line.
    310 template <int> class StaticAssertionHelper { };
    311 #define STATIC_ASSERT(test)                                                    \
    312   typedef                                                                     \
    313     StaticAssertionHelper<sizeof(StaticAssertion<static_cast<bool>((test))>)> \
    314     SEMI_STATIC_JOIN(__StaticAssertTypedef__, __LINE__) ALLOW_UNUSED
    315 
    316 #endif
    317 
    318 
    319 // The USE(x) template is used to silence C++ compiler warnings
    320 // issued for (yet) unused variables (typically parameters).
    321 template <typename T>
    322 inline void USE(T) { }
    323 
    324 
    325 #define IS_POWER_OF_TWO(x) ((x) != 0 && (((x) & ((x) - 1)) == 0))
    326 
    327 
    328 // Define our own macros for writing 64-bit constants.  This is less fragile
    329 // than defining __STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS before including <stdint.h>, and it
    330 // works on compilers that don't have it (like MSVC).
    331 #if V8_CC_MSVC
    332 # define V8_UINT64_C(x)   (x ## UI64)
    333 # define V8_INT64_C(x)    (x ## I64)
    334 # if V8_HOST_ARCH_64_BIT
    335 #  define V8_INTPTR_C(x)  (x ## I64)
    336 #  define V8_PTR_PREFIX   "ll"
    337 # else
    338 #  define V8_INTPTR_C(x)  (x)
    339 #  define V8_PTR_PREFIX   ""
    340 # endif  // V8_HOST_ARCH_64_BIT
    341 #elif V8_CC_MINGW64
    342 # define V8_UINT64_C(x)   (x ## ULL)
    343 # define V8_INT64_C(x)    (x ## LL)
    344 # define V8_INTPTR_C(x)   (x ## LL)
    345 # define V8_PTR_PREFIX    "I64"
    346 #elif V8_HOST_ARCH_64_BIT
    347 # if V8_OS_MACOSX
    348 #  define V8_UINT64_C(x)   (x ## ULL)
    349 #  define V8_INT64_C(x)    (x ## LL)
    350 # else
    351 #  define V8_UINT64_C(x)   (x ## UL)
    352 #  define V8_INT64_C(x)    (x ## L)
    353 # endif
    354 # define V8_INTPTR_C(x)   (x ## L)
    355 # define V8_PTR_PREFIX    "l"
    356 #else
    357 # define V8_UINT64_C(x)   (x ## ULL)
    358 # define V8_INT64_C(x)    (x ## LL)
    359 # define V8_INTPTR_C(x)   (x)
    360 # define V8_PTR_PREFIX    ""
    361 #endif
    362 
    363 #define V8PRIxPTR V8_PTR_PREFIX "x"
    364 #define V8PRIdPTR V8_PTR_PREFIX "d"
    365 #define V8PRIuPTR V8_PTR_PREFIX "u"
    366 
    367 // Fix for Mac OS X defining uintptr_t as "unsigned long":
    368 #if V8_OS_MACOSX
    369 #undef V8PRIxPTR
    370 #define V8PRIxPTR "lx"
    371 #endif
    372 
    373 // The following macro works on both 32 and 64-bit platforms.
    374 // Usage: instead of writing 0x1234567890123456
    375 //      write V8_2PART_UINT64_C(0x12345678,90123456);
    376 #define V8_2PART_UINT64_C(a, b) (((static_cast<uint64_t>(a) << 32) + 0x##b##u))
    377 
    378 
    379 // Compute the 0-relative offset of some absolute value x of type T.
    380 // This allows conversion of Addresses and integral types into
    381 // 0-relative int offsets.
    382 template <typename T>
    383 inline intptr_t OffsetFrom(T x) {
    384   return x - static_cast<T>(0);
    385 }
    386 
    387 
    388 // Compute the absolute value of type T for some 0-relative offset x.
    389 // This allows conversion of 0-relative int offsets into Addresses and
    390 // integral types.
    391 template <typename T>
    392 inline T AddressFrom(intptr_t x) {
    393   return static_cast<T>(static_cast<T>(0) + x);
    394 }
    395 
    396 
    397 // Return the largest multiple of m which is <= x.
    398 template <typename T>
    399 inline T RoundDown(T x, intptr_t m) {
    400   DCHECK(IS_POWER_OF_TWO(m));
    401   return AddressFrom<T>(OffsetFrom(x) & -m);
    402 }
    403 
    404 
    405 // Return the smallest multiple of m which is >= x.
    406 template <typename T>
    407 inline T RoundUp(T x, intptr_t m) {
    408   return RoundDown<T>(static_cast<T>(x + m - 1), m);
    409 }
    410 
    411 #endif   // V8_BASE_MACROS_H_
    412