| [/ |
| Boost.Config |
| |
| Copyright (c) 2001 Beman Dawes |
| Copyright (c) 2001 Vesa Karvonen |
| Copyright (c) 2001 John Maddock |
| |
| Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. |
| (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at |
| http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) |
| ] |
| |
| |
| |
| [section Guidelines for Boost Authors] |
| |
| The __BOOST_CONFIG_HEADER__ header is used to pass configuration information |
| to other boost files, allowing them to cope with platform dependencies such |
| as arithmetic byte ordering, compiler pragmas, or compiler shortcomings. |
| Without such configuration information, many current compilers would not work |
| with the Boost libraries. |
| |
| Centralizing configuration information in this header reduces the number of |
| files that must be modified when porting libraries to new platforms, or when |
| compilers are updated. Ideally, no other files would have to be modified when |
| porting to a new platform. |
| |
| Configuration headers are controversial because some view them as condoning |
| broken compilers and encouraging non-standard subsets. Adding settings for |
| additional platforms and maintaining existing settings can also be a problem. |
| In other words, configuration headers are a necessary evil rather than a |
| desirable feature. The boost config.hpp policy is designed to minimize the |
| problems and maximize the benefits of a configuration header. |
| |
| Note that: |
| |
| * Boost library implementers are not required to "`#include <boost/config.hpp>`", |
| and are not required in any way to support compilers that do not comply |
| with the C++ Standard (ISO/IEC 14882). |
| * If a library implementer wishes to support some non-conforming compiler, |
| or to support some platform specific feature, "`#include <boost/config.hpp>`" |
| is the preferred way to obtain configuration information not available from |
| the standard headers such as `<climits>`, etc. |
| * If configuration information can be deduced from standard headers such as |
| `<climits>`, use those standard headers rather than `<boost/config.hpp>`. |
| * Boost files that use macros defined in `<boost/config.hpp>` should have |
| sensible, standard conforming, default behavior if the macro is not defined. |
| This means that the starting point for porting `<boost/config.hpp>` to a new |
| platform is simply to define nothing at all specific to that platform. In |
| the rare case where there is no sensible default behavior, an #error message |
| should describe the problem. |
| * If a Boost library implementer wants something added to `config.hpp`, post |
| a request on the Boost mailing list. There is no guarantee such a request |
| will be honored; the intent is to limit the complexity of config.hpp. |
| * The intent is to support only compilers which appear on their way to |
| becoming C++ Standard compliant, and only recent releases of those compilers |
| at that. |
| * The intent is not to disable mainstream features now well-supported by the |
| majority of compilers, such as namespaces, exceptions, RTTI, or templates. |
| |
| |
| [section:warnings Disabling Compiler Warnings] |
| |
| The header `<boost/config/warning_disable.hpp>` can be used to disable |
| certain compiler warnings that are hard or impossible to otherwise remove. |
| |
| Note that: |
| |
| * This header [*['should never be included by another Boost header]], it should |
| only ever be used by a library source file or a test case. |
| * The header should be included [*['before you include any other header]]. |
| * This header only disables warnings that are hard or impossible to otherwise |
| deal with, and which are typically emitted by one compiler only, or |
| in one compilers own standard library headers. |
| |
| Currently it disables the following warnings: |
| |
| [table |
| [[Compiler][Warning]] |
| [[Visual C++ 8 and later][[@http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ttcz0bys(VS.80).aspx C4996]: Error 'function': was declared deprecated]] |
| [[Intel C++][Warning 1786: relates to the use of "deprecated" standard |
| library functions rather like C4996 in Visual C++.]] |
| ] |
| |
| [endsect] |
| |
| |
| [section Adding New Defect Macros] |
| |
| When you need to add a new defect macro - either to fix a problem with an |
| existing library, or when adding a new library - distil the issue down to |
| a simple test case; often, at this point other (possibly better) workarounds |
| may become apparent. Secondly always post the test case code to the boost |
| mailing list and invite comments; remember that C++ is complex and that |
| sometimes what may appear a defect, may in fact turn out to be a problem |
| with the authors understanding of the standard. |
| |
| When you name the macro, follow the `BOOST_NO_`['SOMETHING] naming |
| convention, so that it's obvious that this is a macro reporting a defect. |
| |
| Finally, add the test program to the regression tests. You will need to |
| place the test case in a `.ipp` file with the following comments near the top: |
| |
| // MACRO: BOOST_NO_FOO |
| // TITLE: foo |
| // DESCRIPTION: If the compiler fails to support foo |
| |
| These comments are processed by the autoconf script, so make sure the format |
| follows the one given. The file should be named "`boost_no_foo.ipp`", where foo |
| is the defect description - try and keep the file name under the Mac 30 character |
| filename limit though. You will also need to provide a function prototype |
| "`int test()`" that is declared in a namespace with the same name as the macro, |
| but in all lower case, and which returns zero on success: |
| |
| |
| namespace boost_no_foo { |
| int test() |
| { |
| // test code goes here: |
| // |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| } |
| |
| Once the test code is in place in libs/config/test, updating the configuration |
| test system proceeds as: |
| |
| * cd into `libs/config/tools` and run `bjam`. This generates the `.cpp` |
| file test cases from the `.ipp` file, updates the |
| libs/config/test/all/Jamfile.v2, `config_test.cpp` and `config_info.cpp`.[br][br] |
| |
| * cd into `libs/config/test/all` and run `bjam `['MACRONAME` compiler-list`], where |
| ['MACRONAME] is the name of the new macro, and ['`compiler-list`] is a space separated list of |
| compilers to test with.[br][br] |
| The xxx_pass_test and the xxx_fail_test [*should both report `**passed**`].[br][br] |
| If ['MACRONAME] is not defined when it should be defined, xxx_pass_test will not report `**passed**`. |
| If ['MACRONAME] is defined when it should not be defined, xxx_fail_test will not report `**passed**`.[br][br] |
| |
| * cd into `libs/config/test` and run `bjam config_info config_test `['`compiler-list`]. |
| `config_info` should build and run cleanly for all the compilers in ['`compiler-list`] |
| while `config_test` should fail for those that have the defect, and pass for those |
| that do not. |
| |
| Then you should: |
| |
| * Define the defect macro in those config headers that require it. |
| * Document the macro in this documentation (please do not forget this step!!) |
| * Commit everything. |
| * Keep an eye on the regression tests for new failures in Boost.Config caused by |
| the addition. |
| * Start using the macro. |
| |
| [endsect] |
| |
| [section Adding New Feature Test Macros] |
| |
| When you need to add a macro that describes a feature that the standard does |
| not require, follow the convention for adding a new defect macro (above), but |
| call the macro `BOOST_HAS_FOO`, and name the test file "`boost_has_foo.ipp`". |
| Try not to add feature test macros unnecessarily, if there is a platform |
| specific macro that can already be used (for example `_WIN32`, `__BEOS__`, or |
| `__linux`) to identify the feature then use that. Try to keep the macro to a |
| feature group, or header name, rather than one specific API (for example |
| `BOOST_HAS_NL_TYPES_H` rather than `BOOST_HAS_CATOPEN`). If the macro |
| describes a POSIX feature group, then add boilerplate code to |
| __BOOST_CONFIG_SUFFIX_HEADER__ to auto-detect the feature where possible |
| (if you are wondering why we can't use POSIX feature test macro directly, |
| remember that many of these features can be added by third party libraries, |
| and are not therefore identified inside `<unistd.h>`). |
| |
| [endsect] |
| |
| [section Modifying the Boost Configuration Headers] |
| |
| The aim of boost's configuration setup is that the configuration headers should |
| be relatively stable - a boost user should not have to recompile their code |
| just because the configuration for some compiler that they're not interested |
| in has changed. Separating the configuration into separate compiler/standard |
| library/platform sections provides for part of this stability, but boost |
| authors require some amount of restraint as well, in particular: |
| |
| __BOOST_CONFIG_HEADER__ should never change, don't alter this file. |
| |
| __BOOST_CONFIG_USER_HEADER__ is included by default, don't add extra code to |
| this file unless you have to. If you do, please remember to update |
| [@../../tools/configure.in libs/config/tools/configure.in] as well. |
| |
| __BOOST_CONFIG_SUFFIX_HEADER__ is always included so be careful about |
| modifying this file as it breaks dependencies for everyone. This file should |
| include only "boilerplate" configuration code, and generally should change |
| only when new macros are added. |
| |
| [@../../../../boost/config/detail/select_compiler_config.hpp <boost/config/detail/select_compiler_config.hpp>], |
| [@../../../../boost/config/detail/select_platform_config.hpp <boost/config/detail/select_platform_config.hpp>] and |
| [@../../../../boost/config/detail/select_stdlib_config.hpp <boost/config/detail/select_stdlib_config.hpp>] |
| are included by default and should change only if support for a new |
| compiler/standard library/platform is added. |
| |
| The compiler/platform/standard library selection code is set up so that unknown |
| platforms are ignored and assumed to be fully standards compliant - this gives |
| unknown platforms a "sporting chance" of working "as is" even without running |
| the configure script. |
| |
| When adding or modifying the individual mini-configs, assume that future, as |
| yet unreleased versions of compilers, have all the defects of the current |
| version. Although this is perhaps unnecessarily pessimistic, it cuts down on |
| the maintenance of these files, and experience suggests that pessimism is |
| better placed than optimism here! |
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| [endsect] |
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| [endsect] |
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