binutils-gdb/gdb/common/array-view.h

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/* Copyright (C) 2017-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Introduce gdb::array_view An array_view is an abstraction that provides a non-owning view over a sequence of contiguous objects. A way to put it is that array_view is to std::vector (and std::array and built-in arrays with rank==1) like std::string_view is to std::string. The main intent of array_view is to use it as function input parameter type, making it possible to pass in any sequence of contiguous objects, irrespective of whether the objects live on the stack or heap and what actual container owns them. Implicit construction from the element type is supported too, making it easy to call functions that expect an array of elements when you only have one element (usually on the stack). For example: struct A { .... }; void function (gdb::array_view<A> as); std::vector<A> std_vec = ...; std::array<A, N> std_array = ...; A array[] = {...}; A elem; function (std_vec); function (std_array); function (array); function (elem); Views can be either mutable or const. A const view is simply created by specifying a const T as array_view template parameter, in which case operator[] of non-const array_view objects ends up returning const references. (Making the array_view itself const is analogous to making a pointer itself be const. I.e., disables re-seating the view/pointer.) Normally functions will pass around array_views by value. Uses of gdb::array_view (other than the ones in the unit tests) will be added in a follow up patch. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-04 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_SRCS): Add unittests/array-view-selftests.c. (SUBDIR_UNITTESTS_OBS): Add array-view-selftests.o. * common/array-view.h: New file. * unittests/array-view-selftests.c: New file.
2017-09-05 00:10:12 +08:00
This file is part of GDB.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU 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 General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#ifndef COMMON_ARRAY_VIEW_H
#define COMMON_ARRAY_VIEW_H
#include "traits.h"
#include <type_traits>
/* An array_view is an abstraction that provides a non-owning view
over a sequence of contiguous objects.
A way to put it is that array_view is to std::vector (and
std::array and built-in arrays with rank==1) like std::string_view
is to std::string.
The main intent of array_view is to use it as function input
parameter type, making it possible to pass in any sequence of
contiguous objects, irrespective of whether the objects live on the
stack or heap and what actual container owns them. Implicit
construction from the element type is supported too, making it easy
to call functions that expect an array of elements when you only
have one element (usually on the stack). For example:
struct A { .... };
void function (gdb::array_view<A> as);
std::vector<A> std_vec = ...;
std::array<A, N> std_array = ...;
A array[] = {...};
A elem;
function (std_vec);
function (std_array);
function (array);
function (elem);
Views can be either mutable or const. A const view is simply
created by specifying a const T as array_view template parameter,
in which case operator[] of non-const array_view objects ends up
returning const references. Making the array_view itself const is
analogous to making a pointer itself be const. I.e., disables
re-seating the view/pointer.
Since array_view objects are small (pointer plus size), and
designed to be trivially copyable, they should generally be passed
around by value.
You can find unit tests covering the whole API in
unittests/array-view-selftests.c. */
namespace gdb {
template <typename T>
class array_view
{
/* True iff decayed T is the same as decayed U. E.g., we want to
say that 'T&' is the same as 'const T'. */
template <typename U>
using IsDecayedT = typename std::is_same<typename std::decay<T>::type,
typename std::decay<U>::type>;
/* True iff decayed T is the same as decayed U, and 'U *' is
implicitly convertible to 'T *'. This is a requirement for
several methods. */
template <typename U>
using DecayedConvertible = gdb::And<IsDecayedT<U>,
std::is_convertible<U *, T *>>;
public:
using value_type = T;
using reference = T &;
using const_reference = const T &;
using size_type = size_t;
/* Default construction creates an empty view. */
constexpr array_view () noexcept
: m_array (nullptr), m_size (0)
{}
/* Create an array view over a single object of the type of an
array_view element. The created view as size==1. This is
templated on U to allow constructing a array_view<const T> over a
(non-const) T. The "convertible" requirement makes sure that you
can't create an array_view<T> over a const T. */
template<typename U,
typename = Requires<DecayedConvertible<U>>>
constexpr array_view (U &elem) noexcept
: m_array (&elem), m_size (1)
{}
/* Same as above, for rvalue references. */
template<typename U,
typename = Requires<DecayedConvertible<U>>>
constexpr array_view (U &&elem) noexcept
: m_array (&elem), m_size (1)
{}
/* Create an array view from a pointer to an array and an element
count. */
template<typename U,
typename = Requires<DecayedConvertible<U>>>
constexpr array_view (U *array, size_t size) noexcept
: m_array (array), m_size (size)
{}
/* Create an array view from a range. This is templated on both U
an V to allow passing in a mix of 'const T *' and 'T *'. */
template<typename U, typename V,
typename = Requires<DecayedConvertible<U>>,
typename = Requires<DecayedConvertible<V>>>
constexpr array_view (U *begin, V *end) noexcept
: m_array (begin), m_size (end - begin)
{}
/* Create an array view from an array. */
template<typename U, size_t Size,
typename = Requires<DecayedConvertible<U>>>
constexpr array_view (U (&array)[Size]) noexcept
: m_array (array), m_size (Size)
{}
/* Create an array view from a contiguous container. E.g.,
std::vector and std::array. */
template<typename Container,
typename = Requires<gdb::Not<IsDecayedT<Container>>>,
typename
= Requires<std::is_convertible
<decltype (std::declval<Container> ().data ()),
T *>>,
typename
= Requires<std::is_convertible
<decltype (std::declval<Container> ().size ()),
size_type>>>
constexpr array_view (Container &&c) noexcept
: m_array (c.data ()), m_size (c.size ())
{}
/* Observer methods. Some of these can't be constexpr until we
require C++14. */
/*constexpr14*/ T *data () noexcept { return m_array; }
constexpr const T *data () const noexcept { return m_array; }
/*constexpr14*/ T *begin () noexcept { return m_array; }
constexpr const T *begin () const noexcept { return m_array; }
/*constexpr14*/ T *end () noexcept { return m_array + m_size; }
constexpr const T *end () const noexcept { return m_array + m_size; }
/*constexpr14*/ reference operator[] (size_t index) noexcept
{ return m_array[index]; }
constexpr const_reference operator[] (size_t index) const noexcept
{ return m_array[index]; }
constexpr size_type size () const noexcept { return m_size; }
constexpr bool empty () const noexcept { return m_size == 0; }
private:
T *m_array;
size_type m_size;
};
} /* namespace gdb */
#endif