xref: /netbsd-src/external/gpl3/gcc/dist/libstdc++-v3/doc/xml/manual/using.xml (revision f9a78e0e885f664fa1b5fd1637673b39c1aa53b3)
1<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" version="5.0"
2	 xml:id="manual.intro.using" xreflabel="Using">
3  <info><title>Using</title></info>
4  <?dbhtml filename="using.html"?>
5
6  <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.flags" xreflabel="Flags"><info><title>Command Options</title></info>
7
8    <para>
9      The set of features available in the GNU C++ library is shaped by
10      several <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.3.2/gcc/Invoking-GCC.html">GCC
11      Command Options</link>. Options that impact libstdc++ are
12      enumerated and detailed in the table below.
13    </para>
14
15    <para>
16      The standard library conforms to the dialect of C++ specified by the
17      <option>-std</option> option passed to the compiler.
18      By default, <command>g++</command> is equivalent to
19      <command>g++ -std=gnu++14</command> since GCC 6, and
20      <command>g++ -std=gnu++98</command> for older releases.
21    </para>
22
23 <table frame="all" xml:id="table.cmd_options">
24<title>C++ Command Options</title>
25
26<tgroup cols="2" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
27<colspec colname="c1"/>
28<colspec colname="c2"/>
29
30  <thead>
31    <row>
32      <entry>Option Flags</entry>
33      <entry>Description</entry>
34    </row>
35  </thead>
36
37  <tbody>
38    <row>
39      <entry><literal>-std=c++98</literal> or <literal>-std=c++03</literal>
40      </entry>
41      <entry>Use the 1998 ISO C++ standard plus amendments.</entry>
42    </row>
43
44    <row>
45      <entry><literal>-std=gnu++98</literal> or <literal>-std=gnu++03</literal>
46      </entry>
47      <entry>As directly above, with GNU extensions.</entry>
48    </row>
49
50    <row>
51      <entry><literal>-std=c++11</literal></entry>
52      <entry>Use the 2011 ISO C++ standard.</entry>
53    </row>
54
55    <row>
56      <entry><literal>-std=gnu++11</literal></entry>
57      <entry>As directly above, with GNU extensions.</entry>
58    </row>
59
60    <row>
61      <entry><literal>-std=c++14</literal></entry>
62      <entry>Use the 2014 ISO C++ standard.</entry>
63    </row>
64
65    <row>
66      <entry><literal>-std=gnu++14</literal></entry>
67      <entry>As directly above, with GNU extensions.</entry>
68    </row>
69
70    <row>
71      <entry><literal>-fexceptions</literal></entry>
72      <entry>See <link linkend="intro.using.exception.no">exception-free dialect</link></entry>
73    </row>
74
75    <row>
76      <entry><literal>-frtti</literal></entry>
77      <entry>As above, but RTTI-free dialect.</entry>
78    </row>
79
80    <row>
81      <entry><literal>-pthread</literal> or <literal>-pthreads</literal></entry>
82      <entry>For ISO C++11
83        <filename class="headerfile">&lt;thread&gt;</filename>,
84        <filename class="headerfile">&lt;future&gt;</filename>,
85        <filename class="headerfile">&lt;mutex&gt;</filename>,
86        or <filename class="headerfile">&lt;condition_variable&gt;</filename>.
87      </entry>
88    </row>
89
90    <row>
91      <entry><literal>-latomic</literal></entry>
92      <entry>Linking to <filename class="libraryfile">libatomic</filename>
93        is required for some uses of ISO C++11
94        <filename class="headerfile">&lt;atomic&gt;</filename>.
95      </entry>
96    </row>
97
98    <row>
99      <entry><literal>-lstdc++fs</literal></entry>
100      <entry>Linking to <filename class="libraryfile">libstdc++fs</filename>
101        is required for use of the Filesystem library extensions in
102        <filename class="headerfile">&lt;experimental/filesystem&gt;</filename>.
103      </entry>
104    </row>
105
106    <row>
107      <entry><literal>-fopenmp</literal></entry>
108      <entry>For <link linkend="manual.ext.parallel_mode">parallel</link> mode.</entry>
109    </row>
110  </tbody>
111
112</tgroup>
113</table>
114
115  </section>
116
117  <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.headers" xreflabel="Headers"><info><title>Headers</title></info>
118    <?dbhtml filename="using_headers.html"?>
119
120
121    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.headers.all" xreflabel="Header Files"><info><title>Header Files</title></info>
122
123
124   <para>
125     The C++ standard specifies the entire set of header files that
126     must be available to all hosted implementations.  Actually, the
127     word "files" is a misnomer, since the contents of the
128     headers don't necessarily have to be in any kind of external
129     file.  The only rule is that when one <code>#include</code>'s a
130     header, the contents of that header become available, no matter
131     how.
132   </para>
133
134   <para>
135   That said, in practice files are used.
136   </para>
137
138   <para>
139     There are two main types of include files: header files related
140     to a specific version of the ISO C++ standard (called Standard
141     Headers), and all others (TR1, C++ ABI, and Extensions).
142   </para>
143
144   <para>
145     Two dialects of standard headers are supported, corresponding to
146     the 1998 standard as updated for 2003, and the current 2011 standard.
147   </para>
148
149   <para>
150     C++98/03 include files. These are available in the default compilation mode, i.e. <code>-std=c++98</code> or <code>-std=gnu++98</code>.
151   </para>
152
153<table frame="all" xml:id="table.cxx98_headers">
154<title>C++ 1998 Library Headers</title>
155
156<tgroup cols="5" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
157<colspec colname="c1"/>
158<colspec colname="c2"/>
159<colspec colname="c3"/>
160<colspec colname="c4"/>
161<colspec colname="c5"/>
162<tbody>
163<row>
164<entry><filename class="headerfile">algorithm</filename></entry>
165<entry><filename class="headerfile">bitset</filename></entry>
166<entry><filename class="headerfile">complex</filename></entry>
167<entry><filename class="headerfile">deque</filename></entry>
168<entry><filename class="headerfile">exception</filename></entry>
169</row>
170<row>
171<entry><filename class="headerfile">fstream</filename></entry>
172<entry><filename class="headerfile">functional</filename></entry>
173<entry><filename class="headerfile">iomanip</filename></entry>
174<entry><filename class="headerfile">ios</filename></entry>
175<entry><filename class="headerfile">iosfwd</filename></entry>
176</row>
177<row>
178<entry><filename class="headerfile">iostream</filename></entry>
179<entry><filename class="headerfile">istream</filename></entry>
180<entry><filename class="headerfile">iterator</filename></entry>
181<entry><filename class="headerfile">limits</filename></entry>
182<entry><filename class="headerfile">list</filename></entry>
183</row>
184<row>
185<entry><filename class="headerfile">locale</filename></entry>
186<entry><filename class="headerfile">map</filename></entry>
187<entry><filename class="headerfile">memory</filename></entry>
188<entry><filename class="headerfile">new</filename></entry>
189<entry><filename class="headerfile">numeric</filename></entry>
190</row>
191<row>
192<entry><filename class="headerfile">ostream</filename></entry>
193<entry><filename class="headerfile">queue</filename></entry>
194<entry><filename class="headerfile">set</filename></entry>
195<entry><filename class="headerfile">sstream</filename></entry>
196<entry><filename class="headerfile">stack</filename></entry>
197</row>
198<row>
199<entry><filename class="headerfile">stdexcept</filename></entry>
200<entry><filename class="headerfile">streambuf</filename></entry>
201<entry><filename class="headerfile">string</filename></entry>
202<entry><filename class="headerfile">utility</filename></entry>
203<entry><filename class="headerfile">typeinfo</filename></entry>
204</row>
205<row>
206<entry><filename class="headerfile">valarray</filename></entry>
207<entry><filename class="headerfile">vector</filename></entry>
208</row>
209</tbody>
210</tgroup>
211</table>
212
213<para/>
214<table frame="all" xml:id="table.cxx98_cheaders">
215<title>C++ 1998 Library Headers for C Library Facilities</title>
216
217<tgroup cols="5" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
218<colspec colname="c1"/>
219<colspec colname="c2"/>
220<colspec colname="c3"/>
221<colspec colname="c4"/>
222<colspec colname="c5"/>
223<tbody>
224<row>
225<entry><filename class="headerfile">cassert</filename></entry>
226<entry><filename class="headerfile">cerrno</filename></entry>
227<entry><filename class="headerfile">cctype</filename></entry>
228<entry><filename class="headerfile">cfloat</filename></entry>
229<entry><filename class="headerfile">ciso646</filename></entry>
230</row>
231<row>
232<entry><filename class="headerfile">climits</filename></entry>
233<entry><filename class="headerfile">clocale</filename></entry>
234<entry><filename class="headerfile">cmath</filename></entry>
235<entry><filename class="headerfile">csetjmp</filename></entry>
236<entry><filename class="headerfile">csignal</filename></entry>
237</row>
238<row>
239<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstdarg</filename></entry>
240<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstddef</filename></entry>
241<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstdio</filename></entry>
242<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstdlib</filename></entry>
243<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstring</filename></entry>
244</row>
245<row>
246<entry><filename class="headerfile">ctime</filename></entry>
247<entry><filename class="headerfile">cwchar</filename></entry>
248<entry><filename class="headerfile">cwctype</filename></entry>
249</row>
250</tbody>
251</tgroup>
252</table>
253
254<para>
255C++11 include files. These are only available in C++11 compilation
256mode, i.e. <literal>-std=c++11</literal> or <literal>-std=gnu++11</literal>.
257</para>
258
259<para/>
260<table frame="all" xml:id="table.cxx11_headers">
261<title>C++ 2011 Library Headers</title>
262
263<tgroup cols="5" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
264<colspec colname="c1"/>
265<colspec colname="c2"/>
266<colspec colname="c3"/>
267<colspec colname="c4"/>
268<colspec colname="c5"/>
269<tbody>
270
271<row>
272<entry><filename class="headerfile">algorithm</filename></entry>
273<entry><filename class="headerfile">array</filename></entry>
274<entry><filename class="headerfile">bitset</filename></entry>
275<entry><filename class="headerfile">chrono</filename></entry>
276<entry><filename class="headerfile">complex</filename></entry>
277</row>
278<row>
279<entry><filename class="headerfile">condition_variable</filename></entry>
280<entry><filename class="headerfile">deque</filename></entry>
281<entry><filename class="headerfile">exception</filename></entry>
282<entry><filename class="headerfile">forward_list</filename></entry>
283<entry><filename class="headerfile">fstream</filename></entry>
284</row>
285<row>
286<entry><filename class="headerfile">functional</filename></entry>
287<entry><filename class="headerfile">future</filename></entry>
288<entry><filename class="headerfile">initalizer_list</filename></entry>
289<entry><filename class="headerfile">iomanip</filename></entry>
290<entry><filename class="headerfile">ios</filename></entry>
291</row>
292<row>
293<entry><filename class="headerfile">iosfwd</filename></entry>
294<entry><filename class="headerfile">iostream</filename></entry>
295<entry><filename class="headerfile">istream</filename></entry>
296<entry><filename class="headerfile">iterator</filename></entry>
297<entry><filename class="headerfile">limits</filename></entry>
298</row>
299<row>
300<entry><filename class="headerfile">list</filename></entry>
301<entry><filename class="headerfile">locale</filename></entry>
302<entry><filename class="headerfile">map</filename></entry>
303<entry><filename class="headerfile">memory</filename></entry>
304<entry><filename class="headerfile">mutex</filename></entry>
305</row>
306<row>
307<entry><filename class="headerfile">new</filename></entry>
308<entry><filename class="headerfile">numeric</filename></entry>
309<entry><filename class="headerfile">ostream</filename></entry>
310<entry><filename class="headerfile">queue</filename></entry>
311<entry><filename class="headerfile">random</filename></entry>
312</row>
313<row>
314<entry><filename class="headerfile">ratio</filename></entry>
315<entry><filename class="headerfile">regex</filename></entry>
316<entry><filename class="headerfile">set</filename></entry>
317<entry><filename class="headerfile">sstream</filename></entry>
318<entry><filename class="headerfile">stack</filename></entry>
319</row>
320<row>
321<entry><filename class="headerfile">stdexcept</filename></entry>
322<entry><filename class="headerfile">streambuf</filename></entry>
323<entry><filename class="headerfile">string</filename></entry>
324<entry><filename class="headerfile">system_error</filename></entry>
325<entry><filename class="headerfile">thread</filename></entry>
326</row>
327<row>
328<entry><filename class="headerfile">tuple</filename></entry>
329<entry><filename class="headerfile">type_traits</filename></entry>
330<entry><filename class="headerfile">typeinfo</filename></entry>
331<entry><filename class="headerfile">unordered_map</filename></entry>
332<entry><filename class="headerfile">unordered_set</filename></entry>
333</row>
334<row>
335<entry><filename class="headerfile">utility</filename></entry>
336<entry><filename class="headerfile">valarray</filename></entry>
337<entry><filename class="headerfile">vector</filename></entry>
338</row>
339
340</tbody>
341</tgroup>
342</table>
343
344<para/>
345
346<table frame="all" xml:id="table.cxx11_cheaders">
347<title>C++ 2011 Library Headers for C Library Facilities</title>
348
349<tgroup cols="5" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
350<colspec colname="c1"/>
351<colspec colname="c2"/>
352<colspec colname="c3"/>
353<colspec colname="c4"/>
354<colspec colname="c5"/>
355<tbody>
356<row>
357<entry><filename class="headerfile">cassert</filename></entry>
358<entry><filename class="headerfile">ccomplex</filename></entry>
359<entry><filename class="headerfile">cctype</filename></entry>
360<entry><filename class="headerfile">cerrno</filename></entry>
361<entry><filename class="headerfile">cfenv</filename></entry>
362</row>
363<row>
364<entry><filename class="headerfile">cfloat</filename></entry>
365<entry><filename class="headerfile">cinttypes</filename></entry>
366<entry><filename class="headerfile">ciso646</filename></entry>
367<entry><filename class="headerfile">climits</filename></entry>
368<entry><filename class="headerfile">clocale</filename></entry>
369</row>
370<row>
371<entry><filename class="headerfile">cmath</filename></entry>
372<entry><filename class="headerfile">csetjmp</filename></entry>
373<entry><filename class="headerfile">csignal</filename></entry>
374<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstdarg</filename></entry>
375<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstdbool</filename></entry>
376</row>
377<row>
378<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstddef</filename></entry>
379<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstdint</filename></entry>
380<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstdlib</filename></entry>
381<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstdio</filename></entry>
382<entry><filename class="headerfile">cstring</filename></entry>
383</row>
384<row>
385<entry><filename class="headerfile">ctgmath</filename></entry>
386<entry><filename class="headerfile">ctime</filename></entry>
387<entry><filename class="headerfile">cuchar</filename></entry>
388<entry><filename class="headerfile">cwchar</filename></entry>
389<entry><filename class="headerfile">cwctype</filename></entry>
390</row>
391</tbody>
392</tgroup>
393</table>
394
395
396<para>
397  In addition, TR1 includes as:
398</para>
399
400<table frame="all" xml:id="table.tr1_headers">
401<title>C++ TR 1 Library Headers</title>
402
403<tgroup cols="5" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
404<colspec colname="c1"/>
405<colspec colname="c2"/>
406<colspec colname="c3"/>
407<colspec colname="c4"/>
408<colspec colname="c5"/>
409<tbody>
410
411<row>
412<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/array</filename></entry>
413<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/complex</filename></entry>
414<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/memory</filename></entry>
415<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/functional</filename></entry>
416<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/random</filename></entry>
417</row>
418<row>
419<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/regex</filename></entry>
420<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/tuple</filename></entry>
421<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/type_traits</filename></entry>
422<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/unordered_map</filename></entry>
423<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/unordered_set</filename></entry>
424</row>
425<row>
426<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/utility</filename></entry>
427</row>
428
429</tbody>
430</tgroup>
431</table>
432
433<para/>
434
435
436<table frame="all" xml:id="table.tr1_cheaders">
437<title>C++ TR 1 Library Headers for C Library Facilities</title>
438
439<tgroup cols="5" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
440<colspec colname="c1"/>
441<colspec colname="c2"/>
442<colspec colname="c3"/>
443<colspec colname="c4"/>
444<colspec colname="c5"/>
445<tbody>
446
447<row>
448<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/ccomplex</filename></entry>
449<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cfenv</filename></entry>
450<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cfloat</filename></entry>
451<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cmath</filename></entry>
452<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cinttypes</filename></entry>
453</row>
454<row>
455<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/climits</filename></entry>
456<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cstdarg</filename></entry>
457<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cstdbool</filename></entry>
458<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cstdint</filename></entry>
459<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cstdio</filename></entry>
460</row>
461<row>
462<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cstdlib</filename></entry>
463<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/ctgmath</filename></entry>
464<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/ctime</filename></entry>
465<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cwchar</filename></entry>
466<entry><filename class="headerfile">tr1/cwctype</filename></entry>
467</row>
468
469</tbody>
470</tgroup>
471</table>
472
473
474<para>Decimal floating-point arithmetic is available if the C++
475compiler supports scalar decimal floating-point types defined via
476<code>__attribute__((mode(SD|DD|LD)))</code>.
477</para>
478
479<table frame="all" xml:id="table.decfp_headers">
480<title>C++ TR 24733 Decimal Floating-Point Header</title>
481
482<tgroup cols="1" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
483<colspec colname="c1"/>
484<tbody>
485<row>
486<entry><filename class="headerfile">decimal/decimal</filename></entry>
487</row>
488</tbody>
489</tgroup>
490</table>
491
492<para>
493  Also included are files for the C++ ABI interface:
494</para>
495
496<table frame="all" xml:id="table.abi_headers">
497<title>C++ ABI Headers</title>
498
499<tgroup cols="2" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
500<colspec colname="c1"/>
501<colspec colname="c2"/>
502<tbody>
503<row><entry><filename class="headerfile">cxxabi.h</filename></entry><entry><filename class="headerfile">cxxabi_forced.h</filename></entry></row>
504</tbody>
505</tgroup>
506</table>
507
508<para>
509  And a large variety of extensions.
510</para>
511
512<table frame="all" xml:id="table.ext_headers">
513<title>Extension Headers</title>
514
515<tgroup cols="5" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
516<colspec colname="c1"/>
517<colspec colname="c2"/>
518<colspec colname="c3"/>
519<colspec colname="c4"/>
520<colspec colname="c5"/>
521<tbody>
522
523<row>
524<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/algorithm</filename></entry>
525<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/atomicity.h</filename></entry>
526<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/array_allocator.h</filename></entry>
527<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/bitmap_allocator.h</filename></entry>
528<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/cast.h</filename></entry>
529</row>
530<row>
531<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/codecvt_specializations.h</filename></entry>
532<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/concurrence.h</filename></entry>
533<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/debug_allocator.h</filename></entry>
534<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/enc_filebuf.h</filename></entry>
535<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/extptr_allocator.h</filename></entry>
536</row>
537<row>
538<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/functional</filename></entry>
539<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/iterator</filename></entry>
540<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/malloc_allocator.h</filename></entry>
541<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/memory</filename></entry>
542<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/mt_allocator.h</filename></entry>
543</row>
544<row>
545<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/new_allocator.h</filename></entry>
546<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/numeric</filename></entry>
547<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/numeric_traits.h</filename></entry>
548<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/pb_ds/assoc_container.h</filename></entry>
549<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/pb_ds/priority_queue.h</filename></entry>
550</row>
551<row>
552<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/pod_char_traits.h</filename></entry>
553<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/pool_allocator.h</filename></entry>
554<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/rb_tree</filename></entry>
555<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/rope</filename></entry>
556<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/slist</filename></entry>
557</row>
558<row>
559<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/stdio_filebuf.h</filename></entry>
560<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/stdio_sync_filebuf.h</filename></entry>
561<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/throw_allocator.h</filename></entry>
562<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/typelist.h</filename></entry>
563<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/type_traits.h</filename></entry>
564</row>
565<row>
566<entry><filename class="headerfile">ext/vstring.h</filename></entry>
567</row>
568
569</tbody>
570</tgroup>
571</table>
572
573<para/>
574
575<table frame="all" xml:id="table.debug_headers">
576<title>Extension Debug Headers</title>
577
578<tgroup cols="5" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
579<colspec colname="c1"/>
580<colspec colname="c2"/>
581<colspec colname="c3"/>
582<colspec colname="c4"/>
583<colspec colname="c5"/>
584<tbody>
585
586<row>
587<entry><filename class="headerfile">debug/bitset</filename></entry>
588<entry><filename class="headerfile">debug/deque</filename></entry>
589<entry><filename class="headerfile">debug/list</filename></entry>
590<entry><filename class="headerfile">debug/map</filename></entry>
591<entry><filename class="headerfile">debug/set</filename></entry>
592</row>
593
594<row>
595<entry><filename class="headerfile">debug/string</filename></entry>
596<entry><filename class="headerfile">debug/unordered_map</filename></entry>
597<entry><filename class="headerfile">debug/unordered_set</filename></entry>
598<entry><filename class="headerfile">debug/vector</filename></entry>
599</row>
600
601</tbody>
602</tgroup>
603</table>
604
605<para/>
606
607<table frame="all" xml:id="table.profile_headers">
608<title>Extension Profile Headers</title>
609
610<tgroup cols="4" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
611<colspec colname="c1"/>
612<colspec colname="c2"/>
613<colspec colname="c3"/>
614<colspec colname="c4"/>
615<tbody>
616
617<row>
618<entry><filename class="headerfile">profile/bitset</filename></entry>
619<entry><filename class="headerfile">profile/deque</filename></entry>
620<entry><filename class="headerfile">profile/list</filename></entry>
621<entry><filename class="headerfile">profile/map</filename></entry>
622</row>
623
624<row>
625<entry><filename class="headerfile">profile/set</filename></entry>
626<entry><filename class="headerfile">profile/unordered_map</filename></entry>
627<entry><filename class="headerfile">profile/unordered_set</filename></entry>
628<entry><filename class="headerfile">profile/vector</filename></entry>
629</row>
630
631</tbody>
632</tgroup>
633</table>
634
635<para/>
636
637<table frame="all" xml:id="table.parallel_headers">
638<title>Extension Parallel Headers</title>
639
640<tgroup cols="2" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
641<colspec colname="c1"/>
642<colspec colname="c2"/>
643<tbody>
644<row>
645<entry><filename class="headerfile">parallel/algorithm</filename></entry>
646<entry><filename class="headerfile">parallel/numeric</filename></entry>
647</row>
648</tbody>
649</tgroup>
650</table>
651
652    </section>
653
654    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.headers.mixing" xreflabel="Mixing Headers"><info><title>Mixing Headers</title></info>
655
656
657<para> A few simple rules.
658</para>
659
660<para>First, mixing different dialects of the standard headers is not
661possible. It's an all-or-nothing affair. Thus, code like
662</para>
663
664<programlisting>
665#include &lt;array&gt;
666#include &lt;functional&gt;
667</programlisting>
668
669<para>Implies C++11 mode. To use the entities in &lt;array&gt;, the C++11
670compilation mode must be used, which implies the C++11 functionality
671(and deprecations) in &lt;functional&gt; will be present.
672</para>
673
674<para>Second, the other headers can be included with either dialect of
675the standard headers, although features and types specific to C++11
676are still only enabled when in C++11 compilation mode. So, to use
677rvalue references with <code>__gnu_cxx::vstring</code>, or to use the
678debug-mode versions of <code>std::unordered_map</code>, one must use
679the <code>std=gnu++11</code> compiler flag. (Or <code>std=c++11</code>, of course.)
680</para>
681
682<para>A special case of the second rule is the mixing of TR1 and C++11
683facilities. It is possible (although not especially prudent) to
684include both the TR1 version and the C++11 version of header in the
685same translation unit:
686</para>
687
688<programlisting>
689#include &lt;tr1/type_traits&gt;
690#include &lt;type_traits&gt;
691</programlisting>
692
693<para> Several parts of C++11 diverge quite substantially from TR1 predecessors.
694</para>
695    </section>
696
697    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.headers.cheaders" xreflabel="C Headers and"><info><title>The C Headers and <code>namespace std</code></title></info>
698
699
700<para>
701	The standard specifies that if one includes the C-style header
702	(&lt;math.h&gt; in this case), the symbols will be available
703	in the global namespace and perhaps in
704	namespace <code>std::</code> (but this is no longer a firm
705	requirement.) On the other hand, including the C++-style
706	header (&lt;cmath&gt;) guarantees that the entities will be
707	found in namespace std and perhaps in the global namespace.
708      </para>
709
710<para>
711Usage of C++-style headers is recommended, as then
712C-linkage names can be disambiguated by explicit qualification, such
713as by <code>std::abort</code>. In addition, the C++-style headers can
714use function overloading to provide a simpler interface to certain
715families of C-functions. For instance in &lt;cmath&gt;, the
716function <code>std::sin</code> has overloads for all the builtin
717floating-point types. This means that <code>std::sin</code> can be
718used uniformly, instead of a combination
719of <code>std::sinf</code>, <code>std::sin</code>,
720and <code>std::sinl</code>.
721</para>
722    </section>
723
724    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.headers.pre" xreflabel="Precompiled Headers"><info><title>Precompiled Headers</title></info>
725
726
727
728<para>There are three base header files that are provided. They can be
729used to precompile the standard headers and extensions into binary
730files that may then be used to speed up compilations that use these headers.
731</para>
732
733
734<itemizedlist>
735<listitem>
736  <para>stdc++.h</para>
737<para>Includes all standard headers. Actual content varies depending on
738<link linkend="manual.intro.using.flags">language dialect</link>.
739</para>
740</listitem>
741
742<listitem>
743  <para>stdtr1c++.h</para>
744<para>Includes all of &lt;stdc++.h&gt;, and adds all the TR1 headers.
745</para>
746</listitem>
747
748<listitem><para>extc++.h</para>
749<para>Includes all of &lt;stdc++.h&gt;, and adds all the Extension headers
750(and in C++98 mode also adds all the TR1 headers by including all of
751&lt;stdtr1c++.h&gt;).
752</para></listitem>
753</itemizedlist>
754
755<para>To construct a .gch file from one of these base header files,
756first find the include directory for the compiler. One way to do
757this is:</para>
758
759<programlisting>
760g++ -v hello.cc
761
762#include &lt;...&gt; search starts here:
763 /mnt/share/bld/H-x86-gcc.20071201/include/c++/4.3.0
764...
765End of search list.
766</programlisting>
767
768
769<para>Then, create a precompiled header file with the same flags that
770will be used to compile other projects.</para>
771
772<programlisting>
773g++ -Winvalid-pch -x c++-header -g -O2 -o ./stdc++.h.gch /mnt/share/bld/H-x86-gcc.20071201/include/c++/4.3.0/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/bits/stdc++.h
774</programlisting>
775
776<para>The resulting file will be quite large: the current size is around
777thirty megabytes. </para>
778
779<para>How to use the resulting file.</para>
780
781<programlisting>
782g++ -I. -include stdc++.h  -H -g -O2 hello.cc
783</programlisting>
784
785<para>Verification that the PCH file is being used is easy:</para>
786
787<programlisting>
788g++ -Winvalid-pch -I. -include stdc++.h -H -g -O2 hello.cc -o test.exe
789! ./stdc++.h.gch
790. /mnt/share/bld/H-x86-gcc.20071201/include/c++/4.3.0/iostream
791. /mnt/share/bld/H-x86-gcc.20071201include/c++/4.3.0/string
792</programlisting>
793
794<para>The exclamation point to the left of the <code>stdc++.h.gch</code> listing means that the generated PCH file was used.</para>
795<para/>
796
797<para> Detailed information about creating precompiled header files can be found in the GCC <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Precompiled-Headers.html">documentation</link>.
798</para>
799
800    </section>
801  </section>
802
803
804  <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.macros" xreflabel="Macros"><info><title>Macros</title></info>
805    <?dbhtml filename="using_macros.html"?>
806
807
808   <para>
809     All library macros begin with <code>_GLIBCXX_</code>.
810   </para>
811
812   <para>
813     Furthermore, all pre-processor macros, switches, and
814      configuration options are gathered in the
815      file <filename class="headerfile">c++config.h</filename>, which
816      is generated during the libstdc++ configuration and build
817      process. This file is then included when needed by files part of
818      the public libstdc++ API, like
819      <filename class="headerfile">&lt;ios&gt;</filename>. Most of these
820      macros should not be used by consumers of libstdc++, and are reserved
821      for internal implementation use. <emphasis>These macros cannot
822      be redefined</emphasis>.
823   </para>
824
825   <para>
826     A select handful of macros control libstdc++ extensions and extra
827      features, or provide versioning information for the API.  Only
828      those macros listed below are offered for consideration by the
829      general public.
830   </para>
831
832   <para>Below is the macro which users may check for library version
833      information. </para>
834
835    <variablelist>
836    <varlistentry>
837      <term><code>__GLIBCXX__</code></term>
838      <listitem>
839	<para>The current version of
840    libstdc++ in compressed ISO date format, as an unsigned
841    long. For details on the value of this particular macro for a
842    particular release, please consult the <link linkend="appendix.porting.abi">
843    ABI Policy and Guidelines</link> appendix.
844    </para>
845    </listitem>
846    </varlistentry>
847    </variablelist>
848
849   <para>Below are the macros which users may change with #define/#undef or
850      with -D/-U compiler flags.  The default state of the symbol is
851      listed.</para>
852
853   <para><quote>Configurable</quote> (or <quote>Not configurable</quote>) means
854      that the symbol is initially chosen (or not) based on
855      --enable/--disable options at library build and configure time
856      (documented in
857      <link linkend="manual.intro.setup.configure">Configure</link>),
858      with the various --enable/--disable choices being translated to
859      #define/#undef).
860   </para>
861
862   <para> <acronym>ABI</acronym> means that changing from the default value may
863  mean changing the <acronym>ABI</acronym> of compiled code. In other words,
864  these choices control code which has already been compiled (i.e., in a
865  binary such as libstdc++.a/.so).  If you explicitly #define or
866  #undef these macros, the <emphasis>headers</emphasis> may see different code
867  paths, but the <emphasis>libraries</emphasis> which you link against will not.
868  Experimenting with different values with the expectation of
869  consistent linkage requires changing the config headers before
870  building/installing the library.
871   </para>
872
873    <variablelist>
874    <varlistentry><term><code>_GLIBCXX_USE_DEPRECATED</code></term>
875    <listitem>
876      <para>
877	Defined by default. Not configurable. ABI-changing. Turning this off
878	removes older ARM-style iostreams code, and other anachronisms
879	from the API.  This macro is dependent on the version of the
880	standard being tracked, and as a result may give different results for
881	<code>-std=c++98</code> and <code>-std=c++11</code>. This may
882	be useful in updating old C++ code which no longer meet the
883	requirements of the language, or for checking current code
884	against new language standards.
885    </para>
886    </listitem></varlistentry>
887
888    <varlistentry><term><code>_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI</code></term>
889    <listitem>
890      <para>
891        Defined to the value <literal>1</literal> by default.
892        Configurable via  <code>--disable-libstdcxx-dual-abi</code>
893        and/or <code>--with-default-libstdcxx-abi</code>.
894        ABI-changing.
895        When defined to a non-zero value the library headers will use the
896        new C++11-conforming ABI introduced in GCC 5, rather than the older
897        ABI introduced in GCC 3.4. This changes the definition of several
898        class templates, including <classname>std:string</classname>,
899        <classname>std::list</classname> and some locale facets.
900        For more details see <xref linkend="manual.intro.using.abi"/>.
901    </para>
902    </listitem></varlistentry>
903
904    <varlistentry><term><code>_GLIBCXX_CONCEPT_CHECKS</code></term>
905    <listitem>
906      <para>
907	Undefined by default.  Configurable via
908	<code>--enable-concept-checks</code>.  When defined, performs
909	compile-time checking on certain template instantiations to
910	detect violations of the requirements of the standard.  This
911	macro has no effect for freestanding implementations.
912	This is described in more detail in
913	<link linkend="manual.ext.compile_checks">Compile Time Checks</link>.
914      </para>
915    </listitem></varlistentry>
916
917    <varlistentry><term><code>_GLIBCXX_ASSERTIONS</code></term>
918    <listitem>
919      <para>
920	Undefined by default. When defined, enables extra error checking in
921        the form of precondition assertions, such as bounds checking in
922        strings and null pointer checks when dereferencing smart pointers.
923      </para>
924    </listitem></varlistentry>
925    <varlistentry><term><code>_GLIBCXX_DEBUG</code></term>
926    <listitem>
927      <para>
928	Undefined by default. When defined, compiles user code using
929	the <link linkend="manual.ext.debug_mode">debug mode</link>.
930        When defined, <code>_GLIBCXX_ASSERTIONS</code> is defined
931        automatically, so all the assertions enabled by that macro are also
932        enabled in debug mode.
933      </para>
934    </listitem></varlistentry>
935    <varlistentry><term><code>_GLIBCXX_DEBUG_PEDANTIC</code></term>
936    <listitem>
937      <para>
938	Undefined by default. When defined while compiling with
939	the <link linkend="manual.ext.debug_mode">debug mode</link>, makes
940	the debug mode extremely picky by making the use of libstdc++
941	extensions and libstdc++-specific behavior into errors.
942      </para>
943    </listitem></varlistentry>
944    <varlistentry><term><code>_GLIBCXX_PARALLEL</code></term>
945    <listitem>
946      <para>Undefined by default. When defined, compiles user code
947	using the <link linkend="manual.ext.parallel_mode">parallel
948	mode</link>.
949      </para>
950    </listitem></varlistentry>
951    <varlistentry><term><code>_GLIBCXX_PARALLEL_ASSERTIONS</code></term>
952    <listitem>
953      <para>Undefined by default, but when any parallel mode header is included
954      this macro will be defined to a non-zero value if
955      <code>_GLIBCXX_ASSERTIONS</code> has a non-zero value, otherwise to zero.
956      When defined to a non-zero value, it enables extra error checking and
957      assertions in the parallel mode.
958      </para>
959    </listitem></varlistentry>
960
961    <varlistentry><term><code>_GLIBCXX_PROFILE</code></term>
962    <listitem>
963      <para>Undefined by default. When defined, compiles user code
964	using the <link linkend="manual.ext.profile_mode">profile
965	mode</link>.
966      </para>
967    </listitem></varlistentry>
968
969    <varlistentry><term><code>__STDCPP_WANT_MATH_SPEC_FUNCS__</code></term>
970    <listitem>
971      <para>Undefined by default. When defined to a non-zero integer constant,
972	enables support for ISO/IEC 29124 Special Math Functions.
973      </para>
974    </listitem></varlistentry>
975    </variablelist>
976
977  </section>
978
979<section xml:id="manual.intro.using.abi" xreflabel="Dual ABI">
980  <info><title>Dual ABI</title></info>
981  <?dbhtml filename="using_dual_abi.html"?>
982
983<para> In the GCC 5.1 release libstdc++ introduced a new library ABI that
984  includes new implementations of <classname>std::string</classname> and
985  <classname>std::list</classname>. These changes were necessary to conform
986  to the 2011 C++ standard which forbids Copy-On-Write strings and requires
987  lists to keep track of their size.
988</para>
989
990<para> In order to maintain backwards compatibility for existing code linked
991  to libstdc++ the library's soname has not changed and the old
992  implementations are still supported in parallel with the new ones.
993  This is achieved by defining the new implementations in an inline namespace
994  so they have different names for linkage purposes, e.g. the new version of
995  <classname>std::list&lt;int&gt;</classname> is actually defined as
996  <classname>std::__cxx11::list&lt;int&gt;</classname>. Because the symbols
997  for the new implementations have different names the definitions for both
998  versions can be present in the same library.
999</para>
1000
1001<para> The <symbol>_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI</symbol> macro (see
1002<xref linkend="manual.intro.using.macros"/>) controls whether
1003  the declarations in the library headers use the old or new ABI.
1004  So the decision of which ABI to use can be made separately for each
1005  source file being compiled.
1006  Using the default configuration options for GCC the default value
1007  of the macro is <literal>1</literal> which causes the new ABI to be active,
1008  so to use the old ABI you must explicitly define the macro to
1009  <literal>0</literal> before including any library headers.
1010  (Be aware that some GNU/Linux distributions configure GCC 5 differently so
1011  that the default value of the macro is <literal>0</literal> and users must
1012  define it to <literal>1</literal> to enable the new ABI.)
1013</para>
1014
1015<para> Although the changes were made for C++11 conformance, the choice of ABI
1016  to use is independent of the <option>-std</option> option used to compile
1017  your code, i.e. for a given GCC build the default value of the
1018  <symbol>_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI</symbol> macro is the same for all dialects.
1019  This ensures that the <option>-std</option> does not change the ABI, so
1020  that it is straightforward to link C++03 and C++11 code together.
1021</para>
1022
1023<para> Because <classname>std::string</classname> is used extensively
1024  throughout the library a number of other types are also defined twice,
1025  including the stringstream classes and several facets used by
1026  <classname>std::locale</classname>. The standard facets which are always
1027  installed in a locale may be present twice, with both ABIs, to ensure that
1028  code like
1029  <code>std::use_facet&lt;std::time_get&lt;char&gt;&gt;(locale);</code>
1030  will work correctly for both <classname>std::time_get</classname> and
1031  <classname>std::__cxx11::time_get</classname> (even if a user-defined
1032  facet that derives from one or other version of
1033  <classname>time_get</classname> is installed in the locale).
1034</para>
1035
1036<para> Although the standard exception types defined in
1037  <filename class="headerfile">&lt;stdexcept&gt;</filename> use strings, they
1038  are not defined twice, so that a <classname>std::out_of_range</classname>
1039  exception thrown in one file can always be caught by a suitable handler in
1040  another file, even if the two files are compiled with different ABIs.
1041</para>
1042
1043<section xml:id="manual.intro.using.abi.trouble" xreflabel="Dual ABI Troubleshooting"><info><title>Troubleshooting</title></info>
1044
1045<para> If you get linker errors about undefined references to symbols
1046  that involve types in the <code>std::__cxx11</code> namespace or the tag
1047  <code>[abi:cxx11]</code> then it probably indicates that you are trying to
1048  link together object files that were compiled with different values for the
1049  <symbol>_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI</symbol> macro. This commonly happens when
1050  linking to a third-party library that was compiled with an older version
1051  of GCC. If the third-party library cannot be rebuilt with the new ABI then
1052  you will need to recompile your code with the old ABI.
1053</para>
1054
1055<para> Not all uses of the new ABI will cause changes in symbol names, for
1056  example a class with a <classname>std::string</classname> member variable
1057  will have the same mangled name whether compiled with the old or new ABI.
1058  In order to detect such problems the new types and functions are
1059  annotated with the <property>abi_tag</property> attribute, allowing the
1060  compiler to warn about potential ABI incompatibilities in code using them.
1061  Those warnings can be enabled with the <option>-Wabi-tag</option> option.
1062</para>
1063
1064</section>
1065</section>
1066
1067  <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.namespaces" xreflabel="Namespaces"><info><title>Namespaces</title></info>
1068    <?dbhtml filename="using_namespaces.html"?>
1069
1070
1071    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.namespaces.all" xreflabel="Available Namespaces"><info><title>Available Namespaces</title></info>
1072
1073
1074
1075
1076<para> There are three main namespaces.
1077</para>
1078
1079<itemizedlist>
1080  <listitem><para>std</para>
1081<para>The ISO C++ standards specify that "all library entities are defined
1082within namespace std." This includes namespaces nested
1083within namespace <code>std</code>, such as namespace
1084<code>std::chrono</code>.
1085</para>
1086</listitem>
1087<listitem><para>abi</para>
1088<para>Specified by the C++ ABI. This ABI specifies a number of type and
1089function APIs supplemental to those required by the ISO C++ Standard,
1090but necessary for interoperability.
1091</para>
1092</listitem>
1093
1094<listitem><para>__gnu_</para>
1095<para>Indicating one of several GNU extensions. Choices
1096include <code>__gnu_cxx</code>, <code>__gnu_debug</code>, <code>__gnu_parallel</code>,
1097and <code>__gnu_pbds</code>.
1098</para></listitem>
1099</itemizedlist>
1100
1101<para> The library uses a number of inline namespaces as implementation
1102details that are not intended for users to refer to directly, these include
1103<code>std::__detail</code>, <code>std::__cxx11</code> and <code>std::_V2</code>.
1104</para>
1105
1106<para> A complete list of implementation namespaces (including namespace contents) is available in the generated source <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/latest-doxygen/namespaces.html">documentation</link>.
1107</para>
1108
1109
1110    </section>
1111
1112    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.namespaces.std" xreflabel="namespace std"><info><title>namespace std</title></info>
1113
1114
1115
1116<para>
1117      One standard requirement is that the library components are defined
1118      in <code>namespace std::</code>. Thus, in order to use these types or
1119      functions, one must do one of two things:
1120</para>
1121
1122<itemizedlist>
1123  <listitem><para>put a kind of <emphasis>using-declaration</emphasis> in your source
1124(either <code>using namespace std;</code> or i.e. <code>using
1125std::string;</code>) This approach works well for individual source files, but
1126should not be used in a global context, like header files.
1127	  </para></listitem> <listitem><para>use a <emphasis>fully
1128qualified name</emphasis> for each library symbol
1129(i.e. <code>std::string</code>, <code>std::cout</code>) Always can be
1130used, and usually enhanced, by strategic use of typedefs. (In the
1131cases where the qualified verbiage becomes unwieldy.)
1132	  </para>
1133	</listitem>
1134</itemizedlist>
1135
1136    </section>
1137
1138    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.namespaces.comp" xreflabel="Using Namespace Composition"><info><title>Using Namespace Composition</title></info>
1139
1140
1141<para>
1142Best practice in programming suggests sequestering new data or
1143functionality in a sanely-named, unique namespace whenever
1144possible. This is considered an advantage over dumping everything in
1145the global namespace, as then name look-up can be explicitly enabled or
1146disabled as above, symbols are consistently mangled without repetitive
1147naming prefixes or macros, etc.
1148</para>
1149
1150<para>For instance, consider a project that defines most of its classes in <code>namespace gtk</code>. It is possible to
1151	adapt <code>namespace gtk</code> to <code>namespace std</code> by using a C++-feature called
1152	<emphasis>namespace composition</emphasis>. This is what happens if
1153	a <emphasis>using</emphasis>-declaration is put into a
1154	namespace-definition: the imported symbol(s) gets imported into the
1155	currently active namespace(s). For example:
1156</para>
1157<programlisting>
1158namespace gtk
1159{
1160  using std::string;
1161  using std::tr1::array;
1162
1163  class Window { ... };
1164}
1165</programlisting>
1166<para>
1167	In this example, <code>std::string</code> gets imported into
1168	<code>namespace gtk</code>.  The result is that use of
1169	<code>std::string</code> inside namespace gtk can just use <code>string</code>, without the explicit qualification.
1170	As an added bonus,
1171	<code>std::string</code> does not get imported into
1172	the global namespace.  Additionally, a more elaborate arrangement can be made for backwards compatibility and portability, whereby the
1173	<code>using</code>-declarations can wrapped in macros that
1174	are set based on autoconf-tests to either "" or i.e. <code>using
1175	  std::string;</code> (depending on whether the system has
1176	libstdc++ in <code>std::</code> or not).  (ideas from
1177	Llewelly and Karl Nelson)
1178</para>
1179
1180
1181    </section>
1182  </section>
1183
1184  <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.linkage" xreflabel="Linkage"><info><title>Linking</title></info>
1185    <?dbhtml filename="using_dynamic_or_shared.html"?>
1186
1187
1188    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.linkage.freestanding" xreflabel="Freestanding"><info><title>Almost Nothing</title></info>
1189
1190      <para>
1191	Or as close as it gets: freestanding. This is a minimal
1192	configuration, with only partial support for the standard
1193	library. Assume only the following header files can be used:
1194      </para>
1195
1196      <itemizedlist>
1197	<listitem>
1198	  <para>
1199	    <filename class="headerfile">cstdarg</filename>
1200	  </para>
1201	</listitem>
1202
1203	<listitem>
1204	  <para>
1205	  <filename class="headerfile">cstddef</filename>
1206	  </para>
1207	</listitem>
1208
1209	<listitem>
1210	  <para>
1211	  <filename class="headerfile">cstdlib</filename>
1212	  </para>
1213	</listitem>
1214
1215	<listitem>
1216	  <para>
1217	  <filename class="headerfile">exception</filename>
1218	  </para>
1219	</listitem>
1220
1221	<listitem>
1222	  <para>
1223	  <filename class="headerfile">limits</filename>
1224	  </para>
1225	</listitem>
1226
1227	<listitem>
1228	  <para>
1229	  <filename class="headerfile">new</filename>
1230	  </para>
1231	</listitem>
1232
1233	<listitem>
1234	  <para>
1235	  <filename class="headerfile">exception</filename>
1236	  </para>
1237	</listitem>
1238
1239	<listitem>
1240	  <para>
1241	  <filename class="headerfile">typeinfo</filename>
1242	  </para>
1243	</listitem>
1244      </itemizedlist>
1245
1246      <para>
1247	In addition, throw in
1248      </para>
1249
1250      <itemizedlist>
1251	<listitem>
1252	  <para>
1253	  <filename class="headerfile">cxxabi.h</filename>.
1254	  </para>
1255	</listitem>
1256      </itemizedlist>
1257
1258      <para>
1259	In the
1260	C++11 <link linkend="manual.intro.using.flags">dialect</link> add
1261      </para>
1262
1263      <itemizedlist>
1264	<listitem>
1265	  <para>
1266	  <filename class="headerfile">initializer_list</filename>
1267	  </para>
1268	</listitem>
1269	<listitem>
1270	  <para>
1271	  <filename class="headerfile">type_traits</filename>
1272	  </para>
1273	</listitem>
1274      </itemizedlist>
1275
1276      <para> There exists a library that offers runtime support for
1277	just these headers, and it is called
1278	<filename class="libraryfile">libsupc++.a</filename>. To use it, compile with <command>gcc</command> instead of <command>g++</command>, like so:
1279      </para>
1280
1281      <para>
1282	<command>gcc foo.cc -lsupc++</command>
1283      </para>
1284
1285      <para>
1286	No attempt is made to verify that only the minimal subset
1287	identified above is actually used at compile time. Violations
1288	are diagnosed as undefined symbols at link time.
1289      </para>
1290    </section>
1291
1292    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.linkage.dynamic" xreflabel="Dynamic and Shared"><info><title>Finding Dynamic or Shared Libraries</title></info>
1293
1294
1295    <para>
1296      If the only library built is the static library
1297      (<filename class="libraryfile">libstdc++.a</filename>), or if
1298      specifying static linking, this section is can be skipped.  But
1299      if building or using a shared library
1300      (<filename class="libraryfile">libstdc++.so</filename>), then
1301      additional location information will need to be provided.
1302    </para>
1303    <para>
1304      But how?
1305    </para>
1306    <para>
1307A quick read of the relevant part of the GCC
1308      manual, <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Invoking-G_002b_002b.html#Invoking-G_002b_002b">Compiling
1309      C++ Programs</link>, specifies linking against a C++
1310      library. More details from the
1311      GCC <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://gcc.gnu.org/faq.html#rpath">FAQ</link>,
1312      which states <emphasis>GCC does not, by default, specify a
1313      location so that the dynamic linker can find dynamic libraries at
1314      runtime.</emphasis>
1315    </para>
1316    <para>
1317      Users will have to provide this information.
1318    </para>
1319    <para>
1320      Methods vary for different platforms and different styles, and
1321      are printed to the screen during installation. To summarize:
1322    </para>
1323    <itemizedlist>
1324      <listitem>
1325	<para>
1326	  At runtime set <literal>LD_LIBRARY_PATH</literal> in your
1327	  environment correctly, so that the shared library for
1328	  libstdc++ can be found and loaded.  Be certain that you
1329	  understand all of the other implications and behavior
1330	  of <literal>LD_LIBRARY_PATH</literal> first.
1331	</para>
1332
1333      </listitem>
1334      <listitem>
1335	<para>
1336	  Compile the path to find the library at runtime into the
1337	  program.  This can be done by passing certain options to
1338	  <command>g++</command>, which will in turn pass them on to
1339	  the linker.  The exact format of the options is dependent on
1340	  which linker you use:
1341	</para>
1342	<itemizedlist>
1343	  <listitem>
1344	    <para>
1345	      GNU ld (default on GNU/Linux):
1346              <literal>-Wl,-rpath,</literal><filename class="directory">destdir/lib</filename>
1347	    </para>
1348	  </listitem>
1349	  <listitem>
1350	  <para>
1351	    Solaris ld:
1352            <literal>-Wl,-R</literal><filename class="directory">destdir/lib</filename>
1353	  </para>
1354	  </listitem>
1355	</itemizedlist>
1356      </listitem>
1357      <listitem>
1358	<para>
1359	  Some linkers allow you to specify the path to the library by
1360	  setting <literal>LD_RUN_PATH</literal> in your environment
1361	  when linking.
1362	</para>
1363      </listitem>
1364      <listitem>
1365	<para>
1366	  On some platforms the system administrator can configure the
1367	  dynamic linker to always look for libraries in
1368	  <filename class="directory">destdir/lib</filename>, for example
1369	  by using the <command>ldconfig</command> utility on GNU/Linux
1370	  or the <command>crle</command> utility on Solaris. This is a
1371	  system-wide change which can make the system unusable so if you
1372	  are unsure then use one of the other methods described above.
1373	</para>
1374      </listitem>
1375    </itemizedlist>
1376    <para>
1377      Use the <command>ldd</command> utility on the linked executable
1378      to show
1379      which <filename class="libraryfile">libstdc++.so</filename>
1380      library the system will get at runtime.
1381    </para>
1382    <para>
1383      A <filename class="libraryfile">libstdc++.la</filename> file is
1384      also installed, for use with Libtool.  If you use Libtool to
1385      create your executables, these details are taken care of for
1386      you.
1387    </para>
1388    </section>
1389
1390    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.linkage.experimental" xreflabel="Library Extensions"><info><title>Experimental Library Extensions</title></info>
1391
1392    <para>
1393      GCC 5.3 includes an implementation of the Filesystem library defined
1394      by the technical specification ISO/IEC TS 18822:2015. Because this is
1395      an experimental library extension, not part of the C++ standard, it
1396      is implemented in a separate library,
1397      <filename class="libraryfile">libstdc++fs.a</filename>, and there is
1398      no shared library for it. To use the library you should include
1399      <filename class="headerfile">&lt;experimental/filesystem&gt;</filename>
1400      and link with <option>-lstdc++fs</option>. The library implementation
1401      is incomplete on non-POSIX platforms, specifically Windows support is
1402      rudimentary.
1403    </para>
1404
1405    <para>
1406      Due to the experimental nature of the Filesystem library the usual
1407      guarantees about ABI stability and backwards compatibility do not apply
1408      to it. There is no guarantee that the components in any
1409      <filename class="headerfile">&lt;experimental/xxx&gt;</filename>
1410      header will remain compatible between different GCC releases.
1411    </para>
1412    </section>
1413  </section>
1414
1415  <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.concurrency" xreflabel="Concurrency"><info><title>Concurrency</title></info>
1416    <?dbhtml filename="using_concurrency.html"?>
1417
1418
1419   <para>This section discusses issues surrounding the proper compilation
1420      of multithreaded applications which use the Standard C++
1421      library.  This information is GCC-specific since the C++
1422      standard does not address matters of multithreaded applications.
1423   </para>
1424
1425    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.concurrency.prereq" xreflabel="Thread Prereq"><info><title>Prerequisites</title></info>
1426
1427
1428   <para>All normal disclaimers aside, multithreaded C++ application are
1429      only supported when libstdc++ and all user code was built with
1430      compilers which report (via <code> gcc/g++ -v </code>) the same thread
1431      model and that model is not <emphasis>single</emphasis>.  As long as your
1432      final application is actually single-threaded, then it should be
1433      safe to mix user code built with a thread model of
1434      <emphasis>single</emphasis> with a libstdc++ and other C++ libraries built
1435      with another thread model useful on the platform.  Other mixes
1436      may or may not work but are not considered supported.  (Thus, if
1437      you distribute a shared C++ library in binary form only, it may
1438      be best to compile it with a GCC configured with
1439      --enable-threads for maximal interchangeability and usefulness
1440      with a user population that may have built GCC with either
1441      --enable-threads or --disable-threads.)
1442   </para>
1443   <para>When you link a multithreaded application, you will probably
1444      need to add a library or flag to g++.  This is a very
1445      non-standardized area of GCC across ports.  Some ports support a
1446      special flag (the spelling isn't even standardized yet) to add
1447      all required macros to a compilation (if any such flags are
1448      required then you must provide the flag for all compilations not
1449      just linking) and link-library additions and/or replacements at
1450      link time.  The documentation is weak.  On several targets (including
1451      GNU/Linux, Solaris and various BSDs) -pthread is honored.
1452      Some other ports use other switches.
1453      This is not well documented anywhere other than
1454      in "gcc -dumpspecs" (look at the 'lib' and 'cpp' entries).
1455   </para>
1456
1457   <para>
1458     Some uses of <classname>std::atomic</classname> also require linking
1459     to <filename class="libraryfile">libatomic</filename>.
1460   </para>
1461
1462    </section>
1463
1464    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.concurrency.thread_safety" xreflabel="Thread Safety"><info><title>Thread Safety</title></info>
1465
1466
1467<para>
1468In the terms of the 2011 C++ standard a thread-safe program is one which
1469does not perform any conflicting non-atomic operations on memory locations
1470and so does not contain any data races.
1471The standard places requirements on the library to ensure that no data
1472races are caused by the library itself or by programs which use the
1473library correctly (as described below).
1474The C++11 memory model and library requirements are a more formal version
1475of the <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/thread_safety.html">SGI STL</link> definition of thread safety, which the library used
1476prior to the 2011 standard.
1477</para>
1478
1479
1480      <para>The library strives to be thread-safe when all of the following
1481	 conditions are met:
1482      </para>
1483      <itemizedlist>
1484       <listitem>
1485       <para>The system's libc is itself thread-safe,
1486       </para>
1487       </listitem>
1488       <listitem>
1489	 <para>
1490	   The compiler in use reports a thread model other than
1491	   'single'. This can be tested via output from <code>gcc
1492	   -v</code>. Multi-thread capable versions of gcc output
1493	   something like this:
1494	 </para>
1495<programlisting>
1496%gcc -v
1497Using built-in specs.
1498...
1499Thread model: posix
1500gcc version 4.1.2 20070925 (Red Hat 4.1.2-33)
1501</programlisting>
1502
1503<para>Look for "Thread model" lines that aren't equal to "single."</para>
1504       </listitem>
1505       <listitem>
1506       <para>
1507	 Requisite command-line flags are used for atomic operations
1508	 and threading. Examples of this include <code>-pthread</code>
1509	 and <code>-march=native</code>, although specifics vary
1510	 depending on the host environment. See
1511	 <link linkend="manual.intro.using.flags">Command Options</link> and
1512	 <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Option-Summary.html">Machine
1513	 Dependent Options</link>.
1514       </para>
1515       </listitem>
1516       <listitem>
1517	 <para>
1518	   An implementation of the
1519	   <filename class="headerfile">atomicity.h</filename> functions
1520	   exists for the architecture in question. See the
1521	   <link linkend="internals.thread_safety">internals
1522	   documentation</link> for more details.
1523       </para>
1524       </listitem>
1525
1526      </itemizedlist>
1527
1528      <para>The user code must guard against concurrent function calls which
1529         access any particular library object's state when one or more of
1530         those accesses modifies the state. An object will be modified by
1531         invoking a non-const member function on it or passing it as a
1532         non-const argument to a library function. An object will not be
1533         modified by invoking a const member function on it or passing it to
1534         a function as a pointer- or reference-to-const.
1535         Typically, the application
1536         programmer may infer what object locks must be held based on the
1537         objects referenced in a function call and whether the objects are
1538         accessed as const or non-const.  Without getting
1539	 into great detail, here is an example which requires user-level
1540	 locks:
1541      </para>
1542      <programlisting>
1543     library_class_a shared_object_a;
1544
1545     void thread_main () {
1546       library_class_b *object_b = new library_class_b;
1547       shared_object_a.add_b (object_b);   // must hold lock for shared_object_a
1548       shared_object_a.mutate ();          // must hold lock for shared_object_a
1549     }
1550
1551     // Multiple copies of thread_main() are started in independent threads.</programlisting>
1552      <para>Under the assumption that object_a and object_b are never exposed to
1553	 another thread, here is an example that does not require any
1554	 user-level locks:
1555      </para>
1556      <programlisting>
1557     void thread_main () {
1558       library_class_a object_a;
1559       library_class_b *object_b = new library_class_b;
1560       object_a.add_b (object_b);
1561       object_a.mutate ();
1562     } </programlisting>
1563
1564      <para>All library types are safe to use in a multithreaded program
1565         if objects are not shared between threads or as
1566	 long each thread carefully locks out access by any other
1567	 thread while it modifies any object visible to another thread.
1568	 Unless otherwise documented, the only exceptions to these rules
1569         are atomic operations on the types in
1570         <filename class="headerfile">&lt;atomic&gt;</filename>
1571         and lock/unlock operations on the standard mutex types in
1572         <filename class="headerfile">&lt;mutex&gt;</filename>. These
1573         atomic operations allow concurrent accesses to the same object
1574         without introducing data races.
1575      </para>
1576
1577      <para>The following member functions of standard containers can be
1578         considered to be const for the purposes of avoiding data races:
1579         <code>begin</code>, <code>end</code>, <code>rbegin</code>, <code>rend</code>,
1580         <code>front</code>, <code>back</code>, <code>data</code>,
1581         <code>find</code>, <code>lower_bound</code>, <code>upper_bound</code>,
1582         <code>equal_range</code>, <code>at</code>
1583         and, except in associative or unordered associative containers,
1584         <code>operator[]</code>. In other words, although they are non-const
1585         so that they can return mutable iterators, those member functions
1586         will not modify the container.
1587         Accessing an iterator might cause a non-modifying access to
1588         the container the iterator refers to (for example incrementing a
1589         list iterator must access the pointers between nodes, which are part
1590         of the container and so conflict with other accesses to the container).
1591      </para>
1592
1593      <para>Programs which follow the rules above will not encounter data
1594         races in library code, even when using library types which share
1595         state between distinct objects.  In the example below the
1596         <code>shared_ptr</code> objects share a reference count, but
1597         because the code does not perform any non-const operations on the
1598         globally-visible object, the library ensures that the reference
1599         count updates are atomic and do not introduce data races:
1600      </para>
1601      <programlisting>
1602    std::shared_ptr&lt;int&gt; global_sp;
1603
1604    void thread_main() {
1605      auto local_sp = global_sp;  // OK, copy constructor's parameter is reference-to-const
1606
1607      int i = *global_sp;         // OK, operator* is const
1608      int j = *local_sp;          // OK, does not operate on global_sp
1609
1610      // *global_sp = 2;          // NOT OK, modifies int visible to other threads
1611      // *local_sp = 2;           // NOT OK, modifies int visible to other threads
1612
1613      // global_sp.reset();       // NOT OK, reset is non-const
1614      local_sp.reset();           // OK, does not operate on global_sp
1615    }
1616
1617    int main() {
1618      global_sp.reset(new int(1));
1619      std::thread t1(thread_main);
1620      std::thread t2(thread_main);
1621      t1.join();
1622      t2.join();
1623    }
1624      </programlisting>
1625
1626      <para>For further details of the C++11 memory model see Hans-J. Boehm's
1627      <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Hans_Boehm/c++mm/user-faq.html">Threads
1628      and memory model for C++</link> pages, particularly the <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Hans_Boehm/c++mm/threadsintro.html">introduction</link>
1629      and <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Hans_Boehm/c++mm/user-faq.html">FAQ</link>.
1630      </para>
1631
1632  </section>
1633  <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.concurrency.atomics" xreflabel="Atomics"><info><title>Atomics</title></info>
1634
1635    <para>
1636    </para>
1637  </section>
1638
1639    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.concurrency.io" xreflabel="IO"><info><title>IO</title></info>
1640
1641     <para>This gets a bit tricky.  Please read carefully, and bear with me.
1642   </para>
1643
1644    <section xml:id="concurrency.io.structure" xreflabel="Structure"><info><title>Structure</title></info>
1645
1646   <para>A wrapper
1647      type called <code>__basic_file</code> provides our abstraction layer
1648      for the <code>std::filebuf</code> classes.  Nearly all decisions dealing
1649      with actual input and output must be made in <code>__basic_file</code>.
1650   </para>
1651   <para>A generic locking mechanism is somewhat in place at the filebuf layer,
1652      but is not used in the current code.  Providing locking at any higher
1653      level is akin to providing locking within containers, and is not done
1654      for the same reasons (see the links above).
1655   </para>
1656    </section>
1657
1658    <section xml:id="concurrency.io.defaults" xreflabel="Defaults"><info><title>Defaults</title></info>
1659
1660   <para>The __basic_file type is simply a collection of small wrappers around
1661      the C stdio layer (again, see the link under Structure).  We do no
1662      locking ourselves, but simply pass through to calls to <code>fopen</code>,
1663      <code>fwrite</code>, and so forth.
1664   </para>
1665   <para>So, for 3.0, the question of "is multithreading safe for I/O"
1666      must be answered with, "is your platform's C library threadsafe
1667      for I/O?"  Some are by default, some are not; many offer multiple
1668      implementations of the C library with varying tradeoffs of threadsafety
1669      and efficiency.  You, the programmer, are always required to take care
1670      with multiple threads.
1671   </para>
1672   <para>(As an example, the POSIX standard requires that C stdio FILE*
1673       operations are atomic.  POSIX-conforming C libraries (e.g, on Solaris
1674       and GNU/Linux) have an internal mutex to serialize operations on
1675       FILE*s.  However, you still need to not do stupid things like calling
1676       <code>fclose(fs)</code> in one thread followed by an access of
1677       <code>fs</code> in another.)
1678   </para>
1679   <para>So, if your platform's C library is threadsafe, then your
1680      <code>fstream</code> I/O operations will be threadsafe at the lowest
1681      level.  For higher-level operations, such as manipulating the data
1682      contained in the stream formatting classes (e.g., setting up callbacks
1683      inside an <code>std::ofstream</code>), you need to guard such accesses
1684      like any other critical shared resource.
1685   </para>
1686    </section>
1687
1688    <section xml:id="concurrency.io.future" xreflabel="Future"><info><title>Future</title></info>
1689
1690   <para> A
1691      second choice may be available for I/O implementations:  libio.  This is
1692      disabled by default, and in fact will not currently work due to other
1693      issues.  It will be revisited, however.
1694   </para>
1695   <para>The libio code is a subset of the guts of the GNU libc (glibc) I/O
1696      implementation.  When libio is in use, the <code>__basic_file</code>
1697      type is basically derived from FILE.  (The real situation is more
1698      complex than that... it's derived from an internal type used to
1699      implement FILE.  See libio/libioP.h to see scary things done with
1700      vtbls.)  The result is that there is no "layer" of C stdio
1701      to go through; the filebuf makes calls directly into the same
1702      functions used to implement <code>fread</code>, <code>fwrite</code>,
1703      and so forth, using internal data structures.  (And when I say
1704      "makes calls directly," I mean the function is literally
1705      replaced by a jump into an internal function.  Fast but frightening.
1706      *grin*)
1707   </para>
1708   <para>Also, the libio internal locks are used.  This requires pulling in
1709      large chunks of glibc, such as a pthreads implementation, and is one
1710      of the issues preventing widespread use of libio as the libstdc++
1711      cstdio implementation.
1712   </para>
1713   <para>But we plan to make this work, at least as an option if not a future
1714      default.  Platforms running a copy of glibc with a recent-enough
1715      version will see calls from libstdc++ directly into the glibc already
1716      installed.  For other platforms, a copy of the libio subsection will
1717      be built and included in libstdc++.
1718   </para>
1719    </section>
1720
1721    <section xml:id="concurrency.io.alt" xreflabel="Alt"><info><title>Alternatives</title></info>
1722
1723   <para>Don't forget that other cstdio implementations are possible.  You could
1724      easily write one to perform your own forms of locking, to solve your
1725      "interesting" problems.
1726   </para>
1727    </section>
1728
1729    </section>
1730
1731    <section xml:id="manual.intro.using.concurrency.containers" xreflabel="Containers"><info><title>Containers</title></info>
1732
1733
1734   <para>This section discusses issues surrounding the design of
1735      multithreaded applications which use Standard C++ containers.
1736      All information in this section is current as of the gcc 3.0
1737      release and all later point releases.  Although earlier gcc
1738      releases had a different approach to threading configuration and
1739      proper compilation, the basic code design rules presented here
1740      were similar.  For information on all other aspects of
1741      multithreading as it relates to libstdc++, including details on
1742      the proper compilation of threaded code (and compatibility between
1743      threaded and non-threaded code), see Chapter 17.
1744   </para>
1745   <para>Two excellent pages to read when working with the Standard C++
1746      containers and threads are
1747      <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/thread_safety.html">SGI's
1748      http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/thread_safety.html</link> and
1749      <link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/Allocators.html">SGI's
1750      http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/Allocators.html</link>.
1751   </para>
1752   <para><emphasis>However, please ignore all discussions about the user-level
1753      configuration of the lock implementation inside the STL
1754      container-memory allocator on those pages.  For the sake of this
1755      discussion, libstdc++ configures the SGI STL implementation,
1756      not you.  This is quite different from how gcc pre-3.0 worked.
1757      In particular, past advice was for people using g++ to
1758      explicitly define _PTHREADS or other macros or port-specific
1759      compilation options on the command line to get a thread-safe
1760      STL.  This is no longer required for any port and should no
1761      longer be done unless you really know what you are doing and
1762      assume all responsibility.</emphasis>
1763   </para>
1764   <para>Since the container implementation of libstdc++ uses the SGI
1765      code, we use the same definition of thread safety as SGI when
1766      discussing design.  A key point that beginners may miss is the
1767      fourth major paragraph of the first page mentioned above
1768      (<emphasis>For most clients...</emphasis>), which points out that
1769      locking must nearly always be done outside the container, by
1770      client code (that'd be you, not us).  There is a notable
1771      exceptions to this rule.  Allocators called while a container or
1772      element is constructed uses an internal lock obtained and
1773      released solely within libstdc++ code (in fact, this is the
1774      reason STL requires any knowledge of the thread configuration).
1775   </para>
1776   <para>For implementing a container which does its own locking, it is
1777      trivial to provide a wrapper class which obtains the lock (as
1778      SGI suggests), performs the container operation, and then
1779      releases the lock.  This could be templatized <emphasis>to a certain
1780      extent</emphasis>, on the underlying container and/or a locking
1781      mechanism.  Trying to provide a catch-all general template
1782      solution would probably be more trouble than it's worth.
1783   </para>
1784   <para>The library implementation may be configured to use the
1785      high-speed caching memory allocator, which complicates thread
1786      safety issues. For all details about how to globally override
1787      this at application run-time
1788      see <link linkend="manual.intro.using.macros">here</link>. Also
1789      useful are details
1790      on <link linkend="std.util.memory.allocator">allocator</link>
1791      options and capabilities.
1792   </para>
1793
1794    </section>
1795</section>
1796
1797<!-- Section 0x : Exception policies, expectations, topics -->
1798<xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" parse="xml" href="using_exceptions.xml">
1799</xi:include>
1800
1801<!-- Section 0x : Debug -->
1802<xi:include xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" parse="xml" href="debug.xml">
1803</xi:include>
1804
1805</chapter>
1806