xref: /aosp_15_r20/external/angle/third_party/abseil-cpp/absl/base/attributes.h (revision 8975f5c5ed3d1c378011245431ada316dfb6f244)
1 // Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
2 //
3 // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
4 // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
5 // You may obtain a copy of the License at
6 //
7 //      https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
8 //
9 // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
10 // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
11 // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
12 // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
13 // limitations under the License.
14 //
15 // This header file defines macros for declaring attributes for functions,
16 // types, and variables.
17 //
18 // These macros are used within Abseil and allow the compiler to optimize, where
19 // applicable, certain function calls.
20 //
21 // Most macros here are exposing GCC or Clang features, and are stubbed out for
22 // other compilers.
23 //
24 // GCC attributes documentation:
25 //   https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.7.0/gcc/Function-Attributes.html
26 //   https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.7.0/gcc/Variable-Attributes.html
27 //   https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.7.0/gcc/Type-Attributes.html
28 //
29 // Most attributes in this file are already supported by GCC 4.7. However, some
30 // of them are not supported in older version of Clang. Thus, we check
31 // `__has_attribute()` first. If the check fails, we check if we are on GCC and
32 // assume the attribute exists on GCC (which is verified on GCC 4.7).
33 
34 // SKIP_ABSL_INLINE_NAMESPACE_CHECK
35 
36 #ifndef ABSL_BASE_ATTRIBUTES_H_
37 #define ABSL_BASE_ATTRIBUTES_H_
38 
39 #include "absl/base/config.h"
40 
41 // ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE
42 //
43 // A function-like feature checking macro that is a wrapper around
44 // `__has_attribute`, which is defined by GCC 5+ and Clang and evaluates to a
45 // nonzero constant integer if the attribute is supported or 0 if not.
46 //
47 // It evaluates to zero if `__has_attribute` is not defined by the compiler.
48 //
49 // GCC: https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-5/changes.html
50 // Clang: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/LanguageExtensions.html
51 #ifdef __has_attribute
52 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(x) __has_attribute(x)
53 #else
54 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(x) 0
55 #endif
56 
57 // ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE
58 //
59 // A function-like feature checking macro that accepts C++11 style attributes.
60 // It's a wrapper around `__has_cpp_attribute`, defined by ISO C++ SD-6
61 // (https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/experimental/feature_test). If we don't
62 // find `__has_cpp_attribute`, will evaluate to 0.
63 #if defined(__cplusplus) && defined(__has_cpp_attribute)
64 // NOTE: requiring __cplusplus above should not be necessary, but
65 // works around https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=23435.
66 #define ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(x) __has_cpp_attribute(x)
67 #else
68 #define ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(x) 0
69 #endif
70 
71 // -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
72 // Function Attributes
73 // -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
74 //
75 // GCC: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Function-Attributes.html
76 // Clang: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html
77 
78 // ABSL_PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE
79 // ABSL_SCANF_ATTRIBUTE
80 //
81 // Tells the compiler to perform `printf` format string checking if the
82 // compiler supports it; see the 'format' attribute in
83 // <https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.7.0/gcc/Function-Attributes.html>.
84 //
85 // Note: As the GCC manual states, "[s]ince non-static C++ methods
86 // have an implicit 'this' argument, the arguments of such methods
87 // should be counted from two, not one."
88 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(format) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
89 #define ABSL_PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(string_index, first_to_check) \
90   __attribute__((__format__(__printf__, string_index, first_to_check)))
91 #define ABSL_SCANF_ATTRIBUTE(string_index, first_to_check) \
92   __attribute__((__format__(__scanf__, string_index, first_to_check)))
93 #else
94 #define ABSL_PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(string_index, first_to_check)
95 #define ABSL_SCANF_ATTRIBUTE(string_index, first_to_check)
96 #endif
97 
98 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_ALWAYS_INLINE
99 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NOINLINE
100 //
101 // Forces functions to either inline or not inline. Introduced in gcc 3.1.
102 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(always_inline) || \
103     (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
104 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_ALWAYS_INLINE __attribute__((always_inline))
105 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_ALWAYS_INLINE 1
106 #else
107 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_ALWAYS_INLINE
108 #endif
109 
110 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(noinline) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
111 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NOINLINE __attribute__((noinline))
112 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_NOINLINE 1
113 #else
114 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NOINLINE
115 #endif
116 
117 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_TAIL_CALL
118 //
119 // Prevents the compiler from optimizing away stack frames for functions which
120 // end in a call to another function.
121 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(disable_tail_calls)
122 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_NO_TAIL_CALL 1
123 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_TAIL_CALL __attribute__((disable_tail_calls))
124 #elif defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__) && !defined(__e2k__)
125 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_NO_TAIL_CALL 1
126 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_TAIL_CALL \
127   __attribute__((optimize("no-optimize-sibling-calls")))
128 #else
129 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_TAIL_CALL
130 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_NO_TAIL_CALL 0
131 #endif
132 
133 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK
134 //
135 // Tags a function as weak for the purposes of compilation and linking.
136 // Weak attributes did not work properly in LLVM's Windows backend before
137 // 9.0.0, so disable them there. See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37598
138 // for further information. Weak attributes do not work across DLL boundary.
139 // The MinGW compiler doesn't complain about the weak attribute until the link
140 // step, presumably because Windows doesn't use ELF binaries.
141 #if (ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(weak) ||                                 \
142      (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))) &&               \
143     (!defined(_WIN32) ||                                          \
144      (defined(__clang__) && __clang_major__ >= 9 &&               \
145       !defined(ABSL_BUILD_DLL) && !defined(ABSL_CONSUME_DLL))) && \
146     !defined(__MINGW32__)
147 #undef ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK
148 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK __attribute__((weak))
149 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK 1
150 #else
151 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK
152 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK 0
153 #endif
154 
155 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL
156 //
157 // Tells the compiler either (a) that a particular function parameter
158 // should be a non-null pointer, or (b) that all pointer arguments should
159 // be non-null.
160 //
161 // Note: As the GCC manual states, "[s]ince non-static C++ methods
162 // have an implicit 'this' argument, the arguments of such methods
163 // should be counted from two, not one."
164 //
165 // Args are indexed starting at 1.
166 //
167 // For non-static class member functions, the implicit `this` argument
168 // is arg 1, and the first explicit argument is arg 2. For static class member
169 // functions, there is no implicit `this`, and the first explicit argument is
170 // arg 1.
171 //
172 // Example:
173 //
174 //   /* arg_a cannot be null, but arg_b can */
175 //   void Function(void* arg_a, void* arg_b) ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1);
176 //
177 //   class C {
178 //     /* arg_a cannot be null, but arg_b can */
179 //     void Method(void* arg_a, void* arg_b) ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(2);
180 //
181 //     /* arg_a cannot be null, but arg_b can */
182 //     static void StaticMethod(void* arg_a, void* arg_b)
183 //     ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(1);
184 //   };
185 //
186 // If no arguments are provided, then all pointer arguments should be non-null.
187 //
188 //  /* No pointer arguments may be null. */
189 //  void Function(void* arg_a, void* arg_b, int arg_c) ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL();
190 //
191 // NOTE: The GCC nonnull attribute actually accepts a list of arguments, but
192 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL does not.
193 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(nonnull) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
194 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(arg_index) __attribute__((nonnull(arg_index)))
195 #else
196 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL(...)
197 #endif
198 
199 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN
200 //
201 // Tells the compiler that a given function never returns.
202 //
203 // Deprecated: Prefer the `[[noreturn]]` attribute standardized by C++11 over
204 // this macro.
205 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(noreturn) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
206 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN __attribute__((noreturn))
207 #elif defined(_MSC_VER)
208 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN __declspec(noreturn)
209 #else
210 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN
211 #endif
212 
213 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_ADDRESS
214 //
215 // Tells the AddressSanitizer (or other memory testing tools) to ignore a given
216 // function. Useful for cases when a function reads random locations on stack,
217 // calls _exit from a cloned subprocess, deliberately accesses buffer
218 // out of bounds or does other scary things with memory.
219 // NOTE: GCC supports AddressSanitizer(asan) since 4.8.
220 // https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.8/changes.html
221 #if defined(ABSL_HAVE_ADDRESS_SANITIZER) && \
222     ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(no_sanitize_address)
223 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_ADDRESS __attribute__((no_sanitize_address))
224 #elif defined(ABSL_HAVE_ADDRESS_SANITIZER) && defined(_MSC_VER) && \
225     _MSC_VER >= 1928
226 // https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/cpp/no-sanitize-address
227 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_ADDRESS __declspec(no_sanitize_address)
228 #elif defined(ABSL_HAVE_HWADDRESS_SANITIZER) && ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(no_sanitize)
229 // HWAddressSanitizer is a sanitizer similar to AddressSanitizer, which uses CPU
230 // features to detect similar bugs with less CPU and memory overhead.
231 // NOTE: GCC supports HWAddressSanitizer(hwasan) since 11.
232 // https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-11/changes.html
233 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_ADDRESS \
234   __attribute__((no_sanitize("hwaddress")))
235 #else
236 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_ADDRESS
237 #endif
238 
239 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_MEMORY
240 //
241 // Tells the MemorySanitizer to relax the handling of a given function. All "Use
242 // of uninitialized value" warnings from such functions will be suppressed, and
243 // all values loaded from memory will be considered fully initialized.  This
244 // attribute is similar to the ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_ADDRESS attribute
245 // above, but deals with initialized-ness rather than addressability issues.
246 // NOTE: MemorySanitizer(msan) is supported by Clang but not GCC.
247 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(no_sanitize_memory)
248 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_MEMORY __attribute__((no_sanitize_memory))
249 #else
250 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_MEMORY
251 #endif
252 
253 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_THREAD
254 //
255 // Tells the ThreadSanitizer to not instrument a given function.
256 // NOTE: GCC supports ThreadSanitizer(tsan) since 4.8.
257 // https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.8/changes.html
258 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(no_sanitize_thread)
259 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_THREAD __attribute__((no_sanitize_thread))
260 #else
261 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_THREAD
262 #endif
263 
264 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_UNDEFINED
265 //
266 // Tells the UndefinedSanitizer to ignore a given function. Useful for cases
267 // where certain behavior (eg. division by zero) is being used intentionally.
268 // NOTE: GCC supports UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer(ubsan) since 4.9.
269 // https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.9/changes.html
270 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(no_sanitize_undefined)
271 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_UNDEFINED \
272   __attribute__((no_sanitize_undefined))
273 #elif ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(no_sanitize)
274 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_UNDEFINED \
275   __attribute__((no_sanitize("undefined")))
276 #else
277 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_UNDEFINED
278 #endif
279 
280 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_CFI
281 //
282 // Tells the ControlFlowIntegrity sanitizer to not instrument a given function.
283 // See https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ControlFlowIntegrity.html for details.
284 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(no_sanitize) && defined(__llvm__)
285 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_CFI __attribute__((no_sanitize("cfi")))
286 #else
287 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_CFI
288 #endif
289 
290 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_SAFESTACK
291 //
292 // Tells the SafeStack to not instrument a given function.
293 // See https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SafeStack.html for details.
294 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(no_sanitize)
295 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_SAFESTACK \
296   __attribute__((no_sanitize("safe-stack")))
297 #else
298 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_SANITIZE_SAFESTACK
299 #endif
300 
301 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_RETURNS_NONNULL
302 //
303 // Tells the compiler that a particular function never returns a null pointer.
304 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(returns_nonnull)
305 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_RETURNS_NONNULL __attribute__((returns_nonnull))
306 #else
307 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_RETURNS_NONNULL
308 #endif
309 
310 // ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION
311 //
312 // Indicates whether labeled sections are supported. Weak symbol support is
313 // a prerequisite. Labeled sections are not supported on Darwin/iOS.
314 #ifdef ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION
315 #error ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION cannot be directly set
316 #elif (ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(section) ||                \
317        (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))) && \
318     !defined(__APPLE__) && ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK
319 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION 1
320 
321 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION
322 //
323 // Tells the compiler/linker to put a given function into a section and define
324 // `__start_ ## name` and `__stop_ ## name` symbols to bracket the section.
325 // This functionality is supported by GNU linker.  Any function annotated with
326 // `ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION` must not be inlined, or it will be placed into
327 // whatever section its caller is placed into.
328 //
329 #ifndef ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION
330 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION(name) \
331   __attribute__((section(#name))) __attribute__((noinline))
332 #endif
333 
334 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARIABLE
335 //
336 // Tells the compiler/linker to put a given variable into a section and define
337 // `__start_ ## name` and `__stop_ ## name` symbols to bracket the section.
338 // This functionality is supported by GNU linker.
339 #ifndef ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARIABLE
340 #ifdef _AIX
341 // __attribute__((section(#name))) on AIX is achieved by using the `.csect`
342 // psudo op which includes an additional integer as part of its syntax indcating
343 // alignment. If data fall under different alignments then you might get a
344 // compilation error indicating a `Section type conflict`.
345 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARIABLE(name)
346 #else
347 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARIABLE(name) __attribute__((section(#name)))
348 #endif
349 #endif
350 
351 // ABSL_DECLARE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS
352 //
353 // A weak section declaration to be used as a global declaration
354 // for ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_START|STOP(name) to compile and link
355 // even without functions with ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION(name).
356 // ABSL_DEFINE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION should be in the exactly one file; it's
357 // a no-op on ELF but not on Mach-O.
358 //
359 #ifndef ABSL_DECLARE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS
360 #define ABSL_DECLARE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS(name)   \
361   extern char __start_##name[] ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK; \
362   extern char __stop_##name[] ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK
363 #endif
364 #ifndef ABSL_DEFINE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS
365 #define ABSL_INIT_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS(name)
366 #define ABSL_DEFINE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS(name)
367 #endif
368 
369 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_START
370 //
371 // Returns `void*` pointers to start/end of a section of code with
372 // functions having ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION(name).
373 // Returns 0 if no such functions exist.
374 // One must ABSL_DECLARE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS(name) for this to compile and
375 // link.
376 //
377 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_START(name) \
378   (reinterpret_cast<void *>(__start_##name))
379 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_STOP(name) \
380   (reinterpret_cast<void *>(__stop_##name))
381 
382 #else  // !ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION
383 
384 #define ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION 0
385 
386 // provide dummy definitions
387 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION(name)
388 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARIABLE(name)
389 #define ABSL_INIT_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS(name)
390 #define ABSL_DEFINE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS(name)
391 #define ABSL_DECLARE_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_VARS(name)
392 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_START(name) (reinterpret_cast<void *>(0))
393 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION_STOP(name) (reinterpret_cast<void *>(0))
394 
395 #endif  // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_SECTION
396 
397 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_STACK_ALIGN_FOR_OLD_LIBC
398 //
399 // Support for aligning the stack on 32-bit x86.
400 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(force_align_arg_pointer) || \
401     (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
402 #if defined(__i386__)
403 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_STACK_ALIGN_FOR_OLD_LIBC \
404   __attribute__((force_align_arg_pointer))
405 #define ABSL_REQUIRE_STACK_ALIGN_TRAMPOLINE (0)
406 #elif defined(__x86_64__)
407 #define ABSL_REQUIRE_STACK_ALIGN_TRAMPOLINE (1)
408 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_STACK_ALIGN_FOR_OLD_LIBC
409 #else  // !__i386__ && !__x86_64
410 #define ABSL_REQUIRE_STACK_ALIGN_TRAMPOLINE (0)
411 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_STACK_ALIGN_FOR_OLD_LIBC
412 #endif  // __i386__
413 #else
414 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_STACK_ALIGN_FOR_OLD_LIBC
415 #define ABSL_REQUIRE_STACK_ALIGN_TRAMPOLINE (0)
416 #endif
417 
418 // ABSL_MUST_USE_RESULT
419 //
420 // Tells the compiler to warn about unused results.
421 //
422 // For code or headers that are assured to only build with C++17 and up, prefer
423 // just using the standard `[[nodiscard]]` directly over this macro.
424 //
425 // When annotating a function, it must appear as the first part of the
426 // declaration or definition. The compiler will warn if the return value from
427 // such a function is unused:
428 //
429 //   ABSL_MUST_USE_RESULT Sprocket* AllocateSprocket();
430 //   AllocateSprocket();  // Triggers a warning.
431 //
432 // When annotating a class, it is equivalent to annotating every function which
433 // returns an instance.
434 //
435 //   class ABSL_MUST_USE_RESULT Sprocket {};
436 //   Sprocket();  // Triggers a warning.
437 //
438 //   Sprocket MakeSprocket();
439 //   MakeSprocket();  // Triggers a warning.
440 //
441 // Note that references and pointers are not instances:
442 //
443 //   Sprocket* SprocketPointer();
444 //   SprocketPointer();  // Does *not* trigger a warning.
445 //
446 // ABSL_MUST_USE_RESULT allows using cast-to-void to suppress the unused result
447 // warning. For that, warn_unused_result is used only for clang but not for gcc.
448 // https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=66425
449 //
450 // Note: past advice was to place the macro after the argument list.
451 //
452 // TODO(b/176172494): Use ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(nodiscard) when all code is
453 // compliant with the stricter [[nodiscard]].
454 #if defined(__clang__) && ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(warn_unused_result)
455 #define ABSL_MUST_USE_RESULT __attribute__((warn_unused_result))
456 #else
457 #define ABSL_MUST_USE_RESULT
458 #endif
459 
460 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_HOT, ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_COLD
461 //
462 // Tells GCC that a function is hot or cold. GCC can use this information to
463 // improve static analysis, i.e. a conditional branch to a cold function
464 // is likely to be not-taken.
465 // This annotation is used for function declarations.
466 //
467 // Example:
468 //
469 //   int foo() ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_HOT;
470 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(hot) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
471 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_HOT __attribute__((hot))
472 #else
473 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_HOT
474 #endif
475 
476 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(cold) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
477 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_COLD __attribute__((cold))
478 #else
479 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_COLD
480 #endif
481 
482 // ABSL_XRAY_ALWAYS_INSTRUMENT, ABSL_XRAY_NEVER_INSTRUMENT, ABSL_XRAY_LOG_ARGS
483 //
484 // We define the ABSL_XRAY_ALWAYS_INSTRUMENT and ABSL_XRAY_NEVER_INSTRUMENT
485 // macro used as an attribute to mark functions that must always or never be
486 // instrumented by XRay. Currently, this is only supported in Clang/LLVM.
487 //
488 // For reference on the LLVM XRay instrumentation, see
489 // http://llvm.org/docs/XRay.html.
490 //
491 // A function with the XRAY_ALWAYS_INSTRUMENT macro attribute in its declaration
492 // will always get the XRay instrumentation sleds. These sleds may introduce
493 // some binary size and runtime overhead and must be used sparingly.
494 //
495 // These attributes only take effect when the following conditions are met:
496 //
497 //   * The file/target is built in at least C++11 mode, with a Clang compiler
498 //     that supports XRay attributes.
499 //   * The file/target is built with the -fxray-instrument flag set for the
500 //     Clang/LLVM compiler.
501 //   * The function is defined in the translation unit (the compiler honors the
502 //     attribute in either the definition or the declaration, and must match).
503 //
504 // There are cases when, even when building with XRay instrumentation, users
505 // might want to control specifically which functions are instrumented for a
506 // particular build using special-case lists provided to the compiler. These
507 // special case lists are provided to Clang via the
508 // -fxray-always-instrument=... and -fxray-never-instrument=... flags. The
509 // attributes in source take precedence over these special-case lists.
510 //
511 // To disable the XRay attributes at build-time, users may define
512 // ABSL_NO_XRAY_ATTRIBUTES. Do NOT define ABSL_NO_XRAY_ATTRIBUTES on specific
513 // packages/targets, as this may lead to conflicting definitions of functions at
514 // link-time.
515 //
516 // XRay isn't currently supported on Android:
517 // https://github.com/android/ndk/issues/368
518 #if ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(clang::xray_always_instrument) && \
519     !defined(ABSL_NO_XRAY_ATTRIBUTES) && !defined(__ANDROID__)
520 #define ABSL_XRAY_ALWAYS_INSTRUMENT [[clang::xray_always_instrument]]
521 #define ABSL_XRAY_NEVER_INSTRUMENT [[clang::xray_never_instrument]]
522 #if ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(clang::xray_log_args)
523 #define ABSL_XRAY_LOG_ARGS(N) \
524   [[clang::xray_always_instrument, clang::xray_log_args(N)]]
525 #else
526 #define ABSL_XRAY_LOG_ARGS(N) [[clang::xray_always_instrument]]
527 #endif
528 #else
529 #define ABSL_XRAY_ALWAYS_INSTRUMENT
530 #define ABSL_XRAY_NEVER_INSTRUMENT
531 #define ABSL_XRAY_LOG_ARGS(N)
532 #endif
533 
534 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_REINITIALIZES
535 //
536 // Indicates that a member function reinitializes the entire object to a known
537 // state, independent of the previous state of the object.
538 //
539 // The clang-tidy check bugprone-use-after-move allows member functions marked
540 // with this attribute to be called on objects that have been moved from;
541 // without the attribute, this would result in a use-after-move warning.
542 #if ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(clang::reinitializes)
543 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_REINITIALIZES [[clang::reinitializes]]
544 #else
545 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_REINITIALIZES
546 #endif
547 
548 // -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
549 // Variable Attributes
550 // -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
551 
552 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED
553 //
554 // Prevents the compiler from complaining about variables that appear unused.
555 //
556 // For code or headers that are assured to only build with C++17 and up, prefer
557 // just using the standard '[[maybe_unused]]' directly over this macro.
558 //
559 // Due to differences in positioning requirements between the old, compiler
560 // specific __attribute__ syntax and the now standard [[maybe_unused]], this
561 // macro does not attempt to take advantage of '[[maybe_unused]]'.
562 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(unused) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
563 #undef ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED
564 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED __attribute__((__unused__))
565 #else
566 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED
567 #endif
568 
569 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_INITIAL_EXEC
570 //
571 // Tells the compiler to use "initial-exec" mode for a thread-local variable.
572 // See http://people.redhat.com/drepper/tls.pdf for the gory details.
573 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(tls_model) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
574 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_INITIAL_EXEC __attribute__((tls_model("initial-exec")))
575 #else
576 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_INITIAL_EXEC
577 #endif
578 
579 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PACKED
580 //
581 // Instructs the compiler not to use natural alignment for a tagged data
582 // structure, but instead to reduce its alignment to 1.
583 //
584 // Therefore, DO NOT APPLY THIS ATTRIBUTE TO STRUCTS CONTAINING ATOMICS. Doing
585 // so can cause atomic variables to be mis-aligned and silently violate
586 // atomicity on x86.
587 //
588 // This attribute can either be applied to members of a structure or to a
589 // structure in its entirety. Applying this attribute (judiciously) to a
590 // structure in its entirety to optimize the memory footprint of very
591 // commonly-used structs is fine. Do not apply this attribute to a structure in
592 // its entirety if the purpose is to control the offsets of the members in the
593 // structure. Instead, apply this attribute only to structure members that need
594 // it.
595 //
596 // When applying ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PACKED only to specific structure members the
597 // natural alignment of structure members not annotated is preserved. Aligned
598 // member accesses are faster than non-aligned member accesses even if the
599 // targeted microprocessor supports non-aligned accesses.
600 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(packed) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
601 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PACKED __attribute__((__packed__))
602 #else
603 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PACKED
604 #endif
605 
606 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_FUNC_ALIGN
607 //
608 // Tells the compiler to align the function start at least to certain
609 // alignment boundary
610 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(aligned) || (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
611 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_FUNC_ALIGN(bytes) __attribute__((aligned(bytes)))
612 #else
613 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_FUNC_ALIGN(bytes)
614 #endif
615 
616 // ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED
617 //
618 // Annotates implicit fall-through between switch labels, allowing a case to
619 // indicate intentional fallthrough and turn off warnings about any lack of a
620 // `break` statement. The ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED macro should be followed by
621 // a semicolon and can be used in most places where `break` can, provided that
622 // no statements exist between it and the next switch label.
623 //
624 // Example:
625 //
626 //  switch (x) {
627 //    case 40:
628 //    case 41:
629 //      if (truth_is_out_there) {
630 //        ++x;
631 //        ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED;  // Use instead of/along with annotations
632 //                                    // in comments
633 //      } else {
634 //        return x;
635 //      }
636 //    case 42:
637 //      ...
638 //
639 // Notes: When supported, GCC and Clang can issue a warning on switch labels
640 // with unannotated fallthrough using the warning `-Wimplicit-fallthrough`. See
641 // clang documentation on language extensions for details:
642 // https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#fallthrough-clang-fallthrough
643 //
644 // When used with unsupported compilers, the ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED macro has
645 // no effect on diagnostics. In any case this macro has no effect on runtime
646 // behavior and performance of code.
647 
648 #ifdef ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED
649 #error "ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED should not be defined."
650 #elif ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(fallthrough)
651 #define ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED [[fallthrough]]
652 #elif ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(clang::fallthrough)
653 #define ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED [[clang::fallthrough]]
654 #elif ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(gnu::fallthrough)
655 #define ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED [[gnu::fallthrough]]
656 #else
657 #define ABSL_FALLTHROUGH_INTENDED \
658   do {                            \
659   } while (0)
660 #endif
661 
662 // ABSL_DEPRECATED()
663 //
664 // Marks a deprecated class, struct, enum, function, method and variable
665 // declarations. The macro argument is used as a custom diagnostic message (e.g.
666 // suggestion of a better alternative).
667 //
668 // For code or headers that are assured to only build with C++14 and up, prefer
669 // just using the standard `[[deprecated("message")]]` directly over this macro.
670 //
671 // Examples:
672 //
673 //   class ABSL_DEPRECATED("Use Bar instead") Foo {...};
674 //
675 //   ABSL_DEPRECATED("Use Baz() instead") void Bar() {...}
676 //
677 //   template <typename T>
678 //   ABSL_DEPRECATED("Use DoThat() instead")
679 //   void DoThis();
680 //
681 //   enum FooEnum {
682 //     kBar ABSL_DEPRECATED("Use kBaz instead"),
683 //   };
684 //
685 // Every usage of a deprecated entity will trigger a warning when compiled with
686 // GCC/Clang's `-Wdeprecated-declarations` option. Google's production toolchain
687 // turns this warning off by default, instead relying on clang-tidy to report
688 // new uses of deprecated code.
689 #if ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(deprecated)
690 #define ABSL_DEPRECATED(message) __attribute__((deprecated(message)))
691 #else
692 #define ABSL_DEPRECATED(message)
693 #endif
694 
695 // When deprecating Abseil code, it is sometimes necessary to turn off the
696 // warning within Abseil, until the deprecated code is actually removed. The
697 // deprecated code can be surrounded with these directives to achieve that
698 // result.
699 //
700 // class ABSL_DEPRECATED("Use Bar instead") Foo;
701 //
702 // ABSL_INTERNAL_DISABLE_DEPRECATED_DECLARATION_WARNING
703 // Baz ComputeBazFromFoo(Foo f);
704 // ABSL_INTERNAL_RESTORE_DEPRECATED_DECLARATION_WARNING
705 #if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__)
706 // Clang also supports these GCC pragmas.
707 #define ABSL_INTERNAL_DISABLE_DEPRECATED_DECLARATION_WARNING \
708   _Pragma("GCC diagnostic push")             \
709   _Pragma("GCC diagnostic ignored \"-Wdeprecated-declarations\"")
710 #define ABSL_INTERNAL_RESTORE_DEPRECATED_DECLARATION_WARNING \
711   _Pragma("GCC diagnostic pop")
712 #elif defined(_MSC_VER)
713 #define ABSL_INTERNAL_DISABLE_DEPRECATED_DECLARATION_WARNING \
714   _Pragma("warning(push)") _Pragma("warning(disable: 4996)")
715 #define ABSL_INTERNAL_RESTORE_DEPRECATED_DECLARATION_WARNING \
716   _Pragma("warning(pop)")
717 #else
718 #define ABSL_INTERNAL_DISABLE_DEPRECATED_DECLARATION_WARNING
719 #define ABSL_INTERNAL_RESTORE_DEPRECATED_DECLARATION_WARNING
720 #endif  // defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__)
721 
722 // ABSL_CONST_INIT
723 //
724 // A variable declaration annotated with the `ABSL_CONST_INIT` attribute will
725 // not compile (on supported platforms) unless the variable has a constant
726 // initializer. This is useful for variables with static and thread storage
727 // duration, because it guarantees that they will not suffer from the so-called
728 // "static init order fiasco".
729 //
730 // This attribute must be placed on the initializing declaration of the
731 // variable. Some compilers will give a -Wmissing-constinit warning when this
732 // attribute is placed on some other declaration but missing from the
733 // initializing declaration.
734 //
735 // In some cases (notably with thread_local variables), `ABSL_CONST_INIT` can
736 // also be used in a non-initializing declaration to tell the compiler that a
737 // variable is already initialized, reducing overhead that would otherwise be
738 // incurred by a hidden guard variable. Thus annotating all declarations with
739 // this attribute is recommended to potentially enhance optimization.
740 //
741 // Example:
742 //
743 //   class MyClass {
744 //    public:
745 //     ABSL_CONST_INIT static MyType my_var;
746 //   };
747 //
748 //   ABSL_CONST_INIT MyType MyClass::my_var = MakeMyType(...);
749 //
750 // For code or headers that are assured to only build with C++20 and up, prefer
751 // just using the standard `constinit` keyword directly over this macro.
752 //
753 // Note that this attribute is redundant if the variable is declared constexpr.
754 #if defined(__cpp_constinit) && __cpp_constinit >= 201907L
755 #define ABSL_CONST_INIT constinit
756 #elif ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(clang::require_constant_initialization)
757 #define ABSL_CONST_INIT [[clang::require_constant_initialization]]
758 #else
759 #define ABSL_CONST_INIT
760 #endif
761 
762 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE_FUNCTION
763 //
764 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE_FUNCTION is used to annotate declarations of "pure"
765 // functions. A function is pure if its return value is only a function of its
766 // arguments. The pure attribute prohibits a function from modifying the state
767 // of the program that is observable by means other than inspecting the
768 // function's return value. Declaring such functions with the pure attribute
769 // allows the compiler to avoid emitting some calls in repeated invocations of
770 // the function with the same argument values.
771 //
772 // Example:
773 //
774 //  ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE_FUNCTION std::string FormatTime(Time t);
775 #if ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(gnu::pure)
776 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE_FUNCTION [[gnu::pure]]
777 #elif ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(pure)
778 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE_FUNCTION __attribute__((pure))
779 #else
780 // If the attribute isn't defined, we'll fallback to ABSL_MUST_USE_RESULT since
781 // pure functions are useless if its return is ignored.
782 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE_FUNCTION ABSL_MUST_USE_RESULT
783 #endif
784 
785 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_CONST_FUNCTION
786 //
787 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_CONST_FUNCTION is used to annotate declarations of "const"
788 // functions. A const function is similar to a pure function, with one
789 // exception: Pure functions may return value that depend on a non-volatile
790 // object that isn't provided as a function argument, while the const function
791 // is guaranteed to return the same result given the same arguments.
792 //
793 // Example:
794 //
795 //  ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_CONST_FUNCTION int64_t ToInt64Milliseconds(Duration d);
796 #if defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__)
797 // Put the MSVC case first since MSVC seems to parse const as a C++ keyword.
798 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_CONST_FUNCTION ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE_FUNCTION
799 #elif ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(gnu::const)
800 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_CONST_FUNCTION [[gnu::const]]
801 #elif ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(const)
802 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_CONST_FUNCTION __attribute__((const))
803 #else
804 // Since const functions are more restrictive pure function, we'll fallback to a
805 // pure function if the const attribute is not handled.
806 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_CONST_FUNCTION ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PURE_FUNCTION
807 #endif
808 
809 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_LIFETIME_BOUND indicates that a resource owned by a function
810 // parameter or implicit object parameter is retained by the return value of the
811 // annotated function (or, for a parameter of a constructor, in the value of the
812 // constructed object). This attribute causes warnings to be produced if a
813 // temporary object does not live long enough.
814 //
815 // When applied to a reference parameter, the referenced object is assumed to be
816 // retained by the return value of the function. When applied to a non-reference
817 // parameter (for example, a pointer or a class type), all temporaries
818 // referenced by the parameter are assumed to be retained by the return value of
819 // the function.
820 //
821 // See also the upstream documentation:
822 // https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#lifetimebound
823 // https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/code-quality/c26816?view=msvc-170
824 #if ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(clang::lifetimebound)
825 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_LIFETIME_BOUND [[clang::lifetimebound]]
826 #elif ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(msvc::lifetimebound)
827 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_LIFETIME_BOUND [[msvc::lifetimebound]]
828 #elif ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(lifetimebound)
829 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_LIFETIME_BOUND __attribute__((lifetimebound))
830 #else
831 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_LIFETIME_BOUND
832 #endif
833 
834 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_VIEW indicates that a type is solely a "view" of data that it
835 // points to, similarly to a span, string_view, or other non-owning reference
836 // type.
837 // This enables diagnosing certain lifetime issues similar to those enabled by
838 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_LIFETIME_BOUND, such as:
839 //
840 //   struct ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_VIEW StringView {
841 //     template<class R>
842 //     StringView(const R&);
843 //   };
844 //
845 //   StringView f(std::string s) {
846 //     return s;  // warning: address of stack memory returned
847 //   }
848 //
849 // We disable this on Clang versions < 13 because of the following
850 // false-positive:
851 //
852 //   absl::string_view f(absl::optional<absl::string_view> sv) { return *sv; }
853 //
854 // See the following links for details:
855 // https://reviews.llvm.org/D64448
856 // https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-November/060355.html
857 #if ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(gsl::Pointer) && \
858     (!defined(__clang_major__) || __clang_major__ >= 13)
859 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_VIEW [[gsl::Pointer]]
860 #else
861 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_VIEW
862 #endif
863 
864 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_OWNER indicates that a type is a container, smart pointer, or
865 // similar class that owns all the data that it points to.
866 // This enables diagnosing certain lifetime issues similar to those enabled by
867 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_LIFETIME_BOUND, such as:
868 //
869 //   struct ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_VIEW StringView {
870 //     template<class R>
871 //     StringView(const R&);
872 //   };
873 //
874 //   struct ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_OWNER String {};
875 //
876 //   StringView f(String s) {
877 //     return s;  // warning: address of stack memory returned
878 //   }
879 //
880 // We disable this on Clang versions < 13 because of the following
881 // false-positive:
882 //
883 //   absl::string_view f(absl::optional<absl::string_view> sv) { return *sv; }
884 //
885 // See the following links for details:
886 // https://reviews.llvm.org/D64448
887 // https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-November/060355.html
888 #if ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(gsl::Owner) && \
889     (!defined(__clang_major__) || __clang_major__ >= 13)
890 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_OWNER [[gsl::Owner]]
891 #else
892 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_OWNER
893 #endif
894 
895 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_TRIVIAL_ABI
896 // Indicates that a type is "trivially relocatable" -- meaning it can be
897 // relocated without invoking the constructor/destructor, using a form of move
898 // elision.
899 //
900 // From a memory safety point of view, putting aside destructor ordering, it's
901 // safe to apply ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_TRIVIAL_ABI if an object's location
902 // can change over the course of its lifetime: if a constructor can be run one
903 // place, and then the object magically teleports to another place where some
904 // methods are run, and then the object teleports to yet another place where it
905 // is destroyed. This is notably not true for self-referential types, where the
906 // move-constructor must keep the self-reference up to date. If the type changed
907 // location without invoking the move constructor, it would have a dangling
908 // self-reference.
909 //
910 // The use of this teleporting machinery means that the number of paired
911 // move/destroy operations can change, and so it is a bad idea to apply this to
912 // a type meant to count the number of moves.
913 //
914 // Warning: applying this can, rarely, break callers. Objects passed by value
915 // will be destroyed at the end of the call, instead of the end of the
916 // full-expression containing the call. In addition, it changes the ABI
917 // of functions accepting this type by value (e.g. to pass in registers).
918 //
919 // See also the upstream documentation:
920 // https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#trivial-abi
921 //
922 // b/321691395 - This is currently disabled in open-source builds since
923 // compiler support differs. If system libraries compiled with GCC are mixed
924 // with libraries compiled with Clang, types will have different ideas about
925 // their ABI, leading to hard to debug crashes.
926 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_TRIVIAL_ABI
927 
928 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_UNIQUE_ADDRESS
929 //
930 // Indicates a data member can be optimized to occupy no space (if it is empty)
931 // and/or its tail padding can be used for other members.
932 //
933 // For code that is assured to only build with C++20 or later, prefer using
934 // the standard attribute `[[no_unique_address]]` directly instead of this
935 // macro.
936 //
937 // https://devblogs.microsoft.com/cppblog/msvc-cpp20-and-the-std-cpp20-switch/#c20-no_unique_address
938 // Current versions of MSVC have disabled `[[no_unique_address]]` since it
939 // breaks ABI compatibility, but offers `[[msvc::no_unique_address]]` for
940 // situations when it can be assured that it is desired. Since Abseil does not
941 // claim ABI compatibility in mixed builds, we can offer it unconditionally.
942 #if defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER >= 1929
943 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_UNIQUE_ADDRESS [[msvc::no_unique_address]]
944 #elif ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(no_unique_address)
945 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_UNIQUE_ADDRESS [[no_unique_address]]
946 #else
947 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NO_UNIQUE_ADDRESS
948 #endif
949 
950 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNINITIALIZED
951 //
952 // GCC and Clang support a flag `-ftrivial-auto-var-init=<option>` (<option>
953 // can be "zero" or "pattern") that can be used to initialize automatic stack
954 // variables. Variables with this attribute will be left uninitialized,
955 // overriding the compiler flag.
956 //
957 // See https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#uninitialized
958 // and https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Common-Variable-Attributes.html#index-uninitialized-variable-attribute
959 #if ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(clang::uninitialized)
960 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNINITIALIZED [[clang::uninitialized]]
961 #elif ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(gnu::uninitialized)
962 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNINITIALIZED [[gnu::uninitialized]]
963 #elif ABSL_HAVE_ATTRIBUTE(uninitialized)
964 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNINITIALIZED __attribute__((uninitialized))
965 #else
966 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_UNINITIALIZED
967 #endif
968 
969 // ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WARN_UNUSED
970 //
971 // Compilers routinely warn about trivial variables that are unused.  For
972 // non-trivial types, this warning is suppressed since the
973 // constructor/destructor may be intentional and load-bearing, for example, with
974 // a RAII scoped lock.
975 //
976 // For example:
977 //
978 // class ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WARN_UNUSED MyType {
979 //  public:
980 //   MyType();
981 //   ~MyType();
982 // };
983 //
984 // void foo() {
985 //   // Warns with ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WARN_UNUSED attribute present.
986 //   MyType unused;
987 // }
988 //
989 // See https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#warn-unused and
990 // https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/C_002b_002b-Attributes.html#index-warn_005funused-type-attribute
991 #if ABSL_HAVE_CPP_ATTRIBUTE(gnu::warn_unused)
992 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WARN_UNUSED [[gnu::warn_unused]]
993 #else
994 #define ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WARN_UNUSED
995 #endif
996 
997 #endif  // ABSL_BASE_ATTRIBUTES_H_
998