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authorAndreas Rottmann <a.rottmann@gmx.at>2009-09-14 12:32:44 +0200
committerAndreas Rottmann <a.rottmann@gmx.at>2009-09-14 12:32:44 +0200
commitfa095a4504cbe668e4244547e2c141597bea4ecf (patch)
tree06135820a286ffec47804e75fbf8a147e92acd2e /lib/verify.h
Imported Upstream version 0.9.1upstream/0.9.1
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+/* Compile-time assert-like macros.
+
+ Copyright (C) 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
+ the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
+ (at your option) any later version.
+
+ This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
+ along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
+
+/* Written by Paul Eggert, Bruno Haible, and Jim Meyering. */
+
+#ifndef VERIFY_H
+# define VERIFY_H 1
+
+/* Each of these macros verifies that its argument R is nonzero. To
+ be portable, R should be an integer constant expression. Unlike
+ assert (R), there is no run-time overhead.
+
+ There are two macros, since no single macro can be used in all
+ contexts in C. verify_true (R) is for scalar contexts, including
+ integer constant expression contexts. verify (R) is for declaration
+ contexts, e.g., the top level.
+
+ Symbols ending in "__" are private to this header.
+
+ The code below uses several ideas.
+
+ * The first step is ((R) ? 1 : -1). Given an expression R, of
+ integral or boolean or floating-point type, this yields an
+ expression of integral type, whose value is later verified to be
+ constant and nonnegative.
+
+ * Next this expression W is wrapped in a type
+ struct verify_type__ { unsigned int verify_error_if_negative_size__: W; }.
+ If W is negative, this yields a compile-time error. No compiler can
+ deal with a bit-field of negative size.
+
+ One might think that an array size check would have the same
+ effect, that is, that the type struct { unsigned int dummy[W]; }
+ would work as well. However, inside a function, some compilers
+ (such as C++ compilers and GNU C) allow local parameters and
+ variables inside array size expressions. With these compilers,
+ an array size check would not properly diagnose this misuse of
+ the verify macro:
+
+ void function (int n) { verify (n < 0); }
+
+ * For the verify macro, the struct verify_type__ will need to
+ somehow be embedded into a declaration. To be portable, this
+ declaration must declare an object, a constant, a function, or a
+ typedef name. If the declared entity uses the type directly,
+ such as in
+
+ struct dummy {...};
+ typedef struct {...} dummy;
+ extern struct {...} *dummy;
+ extern void dummy (struct {...} *);
+ extern struct {...} *dummy (void);
+
+ two uses of the verify macro would yield colliding declarations
+ if the entity names are not disambiguated. A workaround is to
+ attach the current line number to the entity name:
+
+ #define GL_CONCAT0(x, y) x##y
+ #define GL_CONCAT(x, y) GL_CONCAT0 (x, y)
+ extern struct {...} * GL_CONCAT(dummy,__LINE__);
+
+ But this has the problem that two invocations of verify from
+ within the same macro would collide, since the __LINE__ value
+ would be the same for both invocations.
+
+ A solution is to use the sizeof operator. It yields a number,
+ getting rid of the identity of the type. Declarations like
+
+ extern int dummy [sizeof (struct {...})];
+ extern void dummy (int [sizeof (struct {...})]);
+ extern int (*dummy (void)) [sizeof (struct {...})];
+
+ can be repeated.
+
+ * Should the implementation use a named struct or an unnamed struct?
+ Which of the following alternatives can be used?
+
+ extern int dummy [sizeof (struct {...})];
+ extern int dummy [sizeof (struct verify_type__ {...})];
+ extern void dummy (int [sizeof (struct {...})]);
+ extern void dummy (int [sizeof (struct verify_type__ {...})]);
+ extern int (*dummy (void)) [sizeof (struct {...})];
+ extern int (*dummy (void)) [sizeof (struct verify_type__ {...})];
+
+ In the second and sixth case, the struct type is exported to the
+ outer scope; two such declarations therefore collide. GCC warns
+ about the first, third, and fourth cases. So the only remaining
+ possibility is the fifth case:
+
+ extern int (*dummy (void)) [sizeof (struct {...})];
+
+ * This implementation exploits the fact that GCC does not warn about
+ the last declaration mentioned above. If a future version of GCC
+ introduces a warning for this, the problem could be worked around
+ by using code specialized to GCC, e.g.,:
+
+ #if 4 <= __GNUC__
+ # define verify(R) \
+ extern int (* verify_function__ (void)) \
+ [__builtin_constant_p (R) && (R) ? 1 : -1]
+ #endif
+
+ * In C++, any struct definition inside sizeof is invalid.
+ Use a template type to work around the problem. */
+
+
+/* Verify requirement R at compile-time, as an integer constant expression.
+ Return 1. */
+
+# ifdef __cplusplus
+template <int w>
+ struct verify_type__ { unsigned int verify_error_if_negative_size__: w; };
+# define verify_true(R) \
+ (!!sizeof (verify_type__<(R) ? 1 : -1>))
+# else
+# define verify_true(R) \
+ (!!sizeof \
+ (struct { unsigned int verify_error_if_negative_size__: (R) ? 1 : -1; }))
+# endif
+
+/* Verify requirement R at compile-time, as a declaration without a
+ trailing ';'. */
+
+# define verify(R) extern int (* verify_function__ (void)) [verify_true (R)]
+
+#endif