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"><thread></filename>, 84 <filename class="headerfile"><future></filename>, 85 <filename class="headerfile"><mutex></filename>, 86 or <filename class="headerfile"><condition_variable></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"><atomic></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"><experimental/filesystem></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 <array> 666#include <functional> 667</programlisting> 668 669<para>Implies C++11 mode. To use the entities in <array>, the C++11 670compilation mode must be used, which implies the C++11 functionality 671(and deprecations) in <functional> 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 <tr1/type_traits> 690#include <type_traits> 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 (<math.h> 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 (<cmath>) 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 <cmath>, 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 <stdc++.h>, and adds all the TR1 headers. 745</para> 746</listitem> 747 748<listitem><para>extc++.h</para> 749<para>Includes all of <stdc++.h>, and adds all the Extension headers 750(and in C++98 mode also adds all the TR1 headers by including all of 751<stdtr1c++.h>). 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 <...> 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"><ios></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<int></classname> is actually defined as 996 <classname>std::__cxx11::list<int></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<std::time_get<char>>(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"><stdexcept></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"><experimental/filesystem></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"><experimental/xxx></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"><atomic></filename> 1571 and lock/unlock operations on the standard mutex types in 1572 <filename class="headerfile"><mutex></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<int> 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