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Brian Silvermanfad8f552018-08-04 23:36:19 -07001[/
2 / Copyright (c) 2009-2018 Ion Gazta\u00F1aga
3 /
4 / Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying
5 / file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
6 /]
7
8[library Boost.Container
9 [quickbook 1.5]
10 [authors [Gaztanaga, Ion]]
11 [copyright 2009-2018 Ion Gaztanaga]
12 [id container]
13 [dirname container]
14 [purpose Containers library]
15 [license
16 Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
17 (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
18 [@http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt])
19 ]
20]
21
22[template super[x]'''<superscript>'''[x]'''</superscript>''']
23[template sub[x]'''<subscript>'''[x]'''</subscript>''']
24
25[section:intro Introduction]
26
27[*Boost.Container] library implements several well-known containers, including
28STL containers. The aim of the library is to offer advanced features not present
29in standard containers or to offer the latest standard draft features for compilers
30that don't comply with the latest C++ standard.
31
32In short, what does [*Boost.Container] offer?
33
34* Emplacement and move semantics are implemented, including emulation for pre-C++11 compilers.
35* Polymorphic allocators and memory resources, including implementation and emulation for pre-C++17 compilers
36* New advanced features (e.g. recursive containers, configuration options for containers) are present.
37* Containers support stateful allocators and are compatible with [*Boost.Interprocess]
38 (they can be safely placed in shared memory).
39* Users obtain a more uniform performance across all plataforms,
40 including [link container.main_features.scary_iterators SCARY iterators].
41* The library offers new useful containers:
42 * [classref boost::container::flat_map flat_map],
43 [classref boost::container::flat_set flat_set],
44 [classref boost::container::flat_multimap flat_multimap] and
45 [classref boost::container::flat_multiset flat_multiset]: drop-in
46 replacements for standard associative containers but more memory friendly and with faster
47 searches.
48 * [classref boost::container::stable_vector stable_vector]: a std::list and std::vector hybrid
49 container: vector-like random-access iterators and list-like iterator stability in insertions and erasures.
50 * [classref boost::container::static_vector static_vector ]: a vector-like container that internally embeds
51 (statically allocates) all needed memory up to the maximum capacity. Maximum capacity can't be increased and
52 it's specified at compile time.
53 * [classref boost::container::small_vector small_vector ]: a vector-like container that internally embeds
54 (statically allocates) a minimum amount of memory, but dynamically allocates elements when capacity
55 has to be increased. This minimum capacity is specified at compile time.
56 * [classref boost::container::slist slist]: the classic pre-standard singly linked list implementation
57 offering constant-time `size()`. Note that C++11 `forward_list` has no `size()`.
58
59[section:introduction_building_container Building Boost.Container]
60
61There is no need to compile [*Boost.Container], since it's a header-only library,
62just include your Boost header directory in your compiler include path *except if you use*:
63
64* [link container.extended_allocators Extended Allocators]
65* Some [link container.cpp_conformance.polymorphic_memory_resources Polymorphic Memory Resources] classes.
66
67Those exceptions are are implemented as a separately compiled library, so in those cases you must install binaries
68in a location that can be found by your linker.
69If you followed the [@http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/release/more/getting_started/index.html Boost Getting Started]
70instructions, that's already been done for you.
71
72[endsect]
73
74[section:tested_compilers Tested compilers]
75
76[*Boost.Container] requires a decent C++98 compatibility. Some compilers known to work are:
77
78* Visual C++ >= 7.1.
79* GCC >= 4.1.
80* Intel C++ >= 9.0
81
82[endsect]
83
84[endsect]
85
86[section:main_features Main features]
87
88[section:move_emplace Efficient insertion]
89
90Move semantics and placement insertion are two features brought by C++11 containers
91that can have a very positive impact in your C++ applications. Boost.Container implements
92both techniques both for C++11 and C++03 compilers.
93
94[section:move_containers Move-aware containers]
95
96All containers offered by [*Boost.Container] can store movable-only types
97and actual requirements for `value_type` depend on each container operations.
98Following C++11 requirements even for C++03 compilers, many operations now require
99movable or default constructible types instead of just copy constructible types.
100
101Containers themselves are also movable, with no-throw guarantee if allocator
102or predicate (if present) copy operations are no-throw. This allows
103high performance operations when transferring data between vectors.
104Let's see an example:
105
106[import ../example/doc_move_containers.cpp]
107[doc_move_containers]
108
109[endsect]
110
111[section:emplace Emplace: Placement insertion]
112
113All containers offered by [*Boost.Container] implement placement insertion,
114which means that objects can be built directly into the container from user arguments
115without creating any temporary object. For compilers without variadic templates support
116placement insertion is emulated up to a finite (10) number of arguments.
117
118Expensive to move types are perfect candidates emplace functions and in case of node containers
119([classref boost::container::list list], [classref boost::container::set set], ...)
120emplace allows storing non-movable and non-copyable types in containers! Let's
121see an example:
122
123[import ../example/doc_emplace.cpp]
124[doc_emplace]
125
126[endsect]
127
128[endsect]
129
130
131[section:containers_of_incomplete_types Containers of Incomplete Types]
132
133Incomplete types allow
134[@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_erasure [*type erasure ]] and
135[@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursive_data_type [*recursive data types]], and
136C and C++ programmers have been using it for years to build complex data structures, like
137tree structures where a node may have an arbitrary number of children.
138
139What about standard containers? Containers of incomplete types have been under discussion for a long time,
140as explained in Matt Austern's great article ([@http://drdobbs.com/184403814 [*The Standard Librarian: Containers of Incomplete Types]]):
141
142["['Unlike most of my columns, this one is about something you can't do with the C++ Standard library:
143put incomplete types in one of the standard containers. This column explains why you might want to
144do this, why the standardization committee banned it even though they knew it was useful, and what
145you might be able to do to get around the restriction.]]
146
147["['In 1997, shortly before the C++ Standard was completed, the standardization committee received a
148query: Is it possible to create standard containers with incomplete types? It took a while for the
149committee to understand the question. What would such a thing even mean, and why on earth would you
150ever want to do it? The committee eventually worked it out and came up with an answer to the question.
151(Just so you don't have to skip ahead to the end, the answer is "no.") But the question is much more
152interesting than the answer: it points to a useful, and insufficiently discussed, programming technique.
153The standard library doesn't directly support that technique, but the two can be made to coexist.]]
154
155["['In a future revision of C++, it might make sense to relax the restriction on instantiating
156standard library templates with incomplete types. Clearly, the general prohibition should stay
157in place - instantiating templates with incomplete types is a delicate business, and there are
158too many classes in the standard library where it would make no sense. But perhaps it should be
159relaxed on a case-by-case basis, and `vector` looks like a good candidate for such special-case
160treatment: it's the one standard container class where there are good reasons to instantiate
161it with an incomplete type and where Standard Library implementors want to make it work. As of
162today, in fact, implementors would have to go out of their way to prohibit it!]]
163
164C++11 standard is also cautious about incomplete types and STL: ["['17.6.4.8 Other functions (...) 2.
165the effects are undefined in the following cases: (...) In particular - if an incomplete type (3.9)
166is used as a template argument when instantiating a template component,
167unless specifically allowed for that component]].
168
169Finally C++17 added support for incomplete types in `std::vector`, `std::list` and `std::forward_list`
170(see [@https://wg21.link/n4569 ['N4569: Minimal incomplete type support for standard containers, revision 4]]
171for details), but no other containers like `std::set/map/unordered_set/unordered_map`,
172
173Fortunately all [*Boost.Container] containers except
174[classref boost::container::static_vector static_vector] and
175[classref boost::container::small_vector small_vector] and
176[classref boost::container::basic_string basic_string] are designed to support incomplete types.
177[classref boost::container::static_vector static_vector] and
178[classref boost::container::small_vector small_vector] are special because
179they statically allocates memory for `value_type` and this requires complete types.
180[classref boost::container::basic_string basic_string] implements Small String Optimization which
181also requires complete types.
182
183[*Boost.Container] containers supporting incomplete types also support instantiating iterators to
184those incomplete elements.
185
186[section:recursive_containers Recursive containers]
187
188Most [*Boost.Container] containers can be used to define recursive containers:
189
190[import ../example/doc_recursive_containers.cpp]
191[doc_recursive_containers]
192
193[endsect]
194
195[section:type_erasure Type Erasure]
196
197Containers of incomplete types are useful to break header file dependencies and improve
198compilation types. With Boost.Container, you can write a header file defining a class
199with containers of incomplete types as data members, if you carefully put all the
200implementation details that require knowing the size of the `value_type` in your
201implementation file:
202
203[import ../example/doc_type_erasure.cpp]
204
205In this header file we define a class (`MyClassHolder)` that holds a `vector` of an
206incomplete type (`MyClass`) that it's only forward declared.
207
208[doc_type_erasure_MyClassHolder_h]
209
210Then we can define `MyClass` in its own header file.
211
212[doc_type_erasure_MyClass_h]
213
214And include it only in the implementation file of `MyClassHolder`
215
216[doc_type_erasure_MyClassHolder_cpp]
217
218Finally, we can just compile, link, and run!
219
220[doc_type_erasure_main_cpp]
221
222[endsect]
223
224[endsect]
225
226[section:scary_iterators SCARY iterators]
227
228The paper N2913, titled [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2009/n2913.pdf
229SCARY Iterator Assignment and Initialization], proposed a requirement that a standard container's
230iterator types have no dependency on any type argument apart from the container's `value_type`,
231`difference_type`, `pointer type`, and `const_pointer` type. In particular, according to the proposal,
232the types of a standard container's iterators should not depend on the container's `key_compare`,
233`hasher`, `key_equal`, or `allocator` types.
234
235That paper demonstrated that SCARY operations were crucial to the performant implementation of common
236design patterns using STL components. It showed that implementations that support SCARY operations reduce
237object code bloat by eliminating redundant specializations of iterator and algorithm templates.
238
239[*Boost.Container] containers implement SCARY iterators so the iterator type of a container is only dependent
240on the `allocator_traits<allocator_type>::pointer` type (the pointer type of the `value_type` to be inserted
241in the container). Reference types and all other typedefs are deduced from the pointer type using the
242C++11 `pointer_traits` utility. This leads to lower code bloat in algorithms and classes templated on
243iterators.
244
245[endsect]
246
247[section:other_features Other features]
248
249* Default constructors don't allocate memory which improves performance and
250 usually implies a no-throw guarantee (if predicate's or allocator's default constructor doesn't throw).
251
252* Small string optimization for [classref boost::container::basic_string basic_string],
253 with an internal buffer of 11/23 bytes (32/64 bit systems)
254 [*without] increasing the usual `sizeof` of the string (3 words).
255
256* `[multi]set/map` containers are size optimized embedding the color bit of the red-black tree nodes
257 in the parent pointer.
258
259* `[multi]set/map` containers use no recursive functions so stack problems are avoided.
260
261[endsect]
262
263[endsect]
264
265[section:exception_handling Boost.Container and C++ exceptions]
266
267In some environments, such as game development or embedded systems, C++ exceptions are disabled or a customized error handling is needed.
268According to document [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2007/n2271.html N2271 EASTL -- Electronic Arts Standard Template Library]
269exceptions can be disabled for several reasons:
270
271* ["['Exception handling incurs some kind of cost in all compiler implementations, including those that avoid
272 the cost during normal execution. However, in some cases this cost may arguably offset the cost of the code that it is replacing.]]
273* ["['Exception handling is often agreed to be a superior solution for handling a large range of function return values. However,
274 avoiding the creation of functions that need large ranges of return values is superior to using exception handling to handle such values.]]
275* ["['Using exception handling correctly can be difficult in the case of complex software.]]
276* ["['The execution of throw and catch can be significantly expensive with some implementations.]]
277* ["['Exception handling violates the don't-pay-for-what-you-don't-use design of C++, as it incurs overhead in any non-leaf function that
278 has destructible stack objects regardless of whether they use exception handling.]]
279* ["['The approach that game software usually takes is to avoid the need for exception handling where possible; avoid the possibility
280 of circumstances that may lead to exceptions. For example, verify up front that there is enough memory for a subsystem to do its job
281 instead of trying to deal with the problem via exception handling or any other means after it occurs.]]
282* ["['However, some game libraries may nevertheless benefit from the use of exception handling. It's best, however,
283 if such libraries keep the exception handling internal lest they force their usage of exception handling on the rest of the application.]]
284
285In order to support environments without C++ exception support or environments with special error handling needs,
286[*Boost.Container] changes error signalling behaviour when `BOOST_CONTAINER_USER_DEFINED_THROW_CALLBACKS` or `BOOST_NO_EXCEPTIONS`
287is defined. The former shall be defined by the user and the latter can be either defined by the user or implicitly defined by [*Boost.Confg]
288when the compiler has been invoked with the appropriate flag (like `-fno-exceptions` in GCC).
289
290When dealing with user-defined classes, (e.g. when constructing user-defined classes):
291
292* If `BOOST_NO_EXCEPTIONS` is defined, the library avoids using `try`/`catch`/`throw` statements. The class writer must handle and
293 propagate error situations internally as no error will be propagated through [*Boost.Container].
294* If `BOOST_NO_EXCEPTIONS` is *not* defined, the library propagates exceptions offering the exception guarantees detailed in the documentation.
295
296When the library needs to throw an exception (such as `out_of_range` when an incorrect index is used in `vector::at`), the library calls
297a throw-callback declared in [headerref boost/container/throw_exception.hpp]:
298
299* If `BOOST_CONTAINER_USER_DEFINED_THROW_CALLBACKS` is defined, then the programmer must provide its own definition for all
300 `throw_xxx` functions. Those functions can't return, they must throw an exception or call `std::exit` or `std::abort`.
301* Else if `BOOST_NO_EXCEPTIONS` is defined, a `BOOST_ASSERT_MSG` assertion is triggered
302 (see [@http://www.boost.org/libs/utility/assert.html Boost.Assert] for more information).
303 If this assertion returns, then `std::abort` is called.
304* Else, an appropriate standard library exception is thrown (like `std::out_of_range`).
305
306[endsect]
307
308[section:non_standard_containers Non-standard containers]
309
310[section:stable_vector ['stable_vector]]
311
312This useful, fully STL-compliant stable container [@http://bannalia.blogspot.com/2008/09/introducing-stablevector.html designed by Joaqu\u00EDn M. L\u00F3pez Mu\u00F1oz]
313is an hybrid between `vector` and `list`, providing most of
314the features of `vector` except [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/lwg-defects.html#69 element contiguity].
315
316Extremely convenient as they are, `vector`s have a limitation that many novice C++ programmers frequently stumble upon:
317iterators and references to an element of an `vector` are invalidated when a preceding element is erased or when the
318vector expands and needs to migrate its internal storage to a wider memory region (i.e. when the required size exceeds
319the vector's capacity). We say then that `vector`s are unstable: by contrast, stable containers are those for which
320references and iterators to a given element remain valid as long as the element is not erased: examples of stable containers
321within the C++ standard library are `list` and the standard associative containers (`set`, `map`, etc.).
322
323Sometimes stability is too precious a feature to live without, but one particular property of `vector`s, element contiguity,
324makes it impossible to add stability to this container. So, provided we sacrifice element contiguity, how much
325can a stable design approach the behavior of `vector` (random access iterators, amortized constant time end
326insertion/deletion, minimal memory overhead, etc.)?
327The following image describes the layout of a possible data structure upon which to base the design of a stable vector:
328
329[$../../libs/container/doc/images/stable_vector.png [width 50%] [align center] ]
330
331Each element is stored in its own separate node. All the nodes are referenced from a contiguous array of pointers, but
332also every node contains an "up" pointer referring back to the associated array cell. This up pointer is the key element
333to implementing stability and random accessibility:
334
335Iterators point to the nodes rather than to the pointer array. This ensures stability, as it is only the pointer array
336that needs to be shifted or relocated upon insertion or deletion. Random access operations can be implemented by using
337the pointer array as a convenient intermediate zone. For instance, if the iterator it holds a node pointer `it.p` and we
338want to advance it by n positions, we simply do:
339
340[c++]
341
342 it.p = *(it.p->up+n);
343
344That is, we go "up" to the pointer array, add n there and then go "down" to the resulting node.
345
346[*General properties]. `stable_vector` satisfies all the requirements of a container, a reversible container and a sequence
347and provides all the optional operations present in vector. Like vector, iterators are random access. `stable_vector`
348does not provide element contiguity; in exchange for this absence, the container is stable, i.e. references and iterators
349to an element of a `stable_vector` remain valid as long as the element is not erased, and an iterator that has been
350assigned the return value of end() always remain valid until the destruction of the associated `stable_vector`.
351
352[*Operation complexity]. The big-O complexities of `stable_vector` operations match exactly those of vector. In general,
353insertion/deletion is constant time at the end of the sequence and linear elsewhere. Unlike vector, `stable_vector`
354does not internally perform any value_type destruction, copy/move construction/assignment operations other than those exactly
355corresponding to the insertion of new elements or deletion of stored elements, which can sometimes compensate in terms of
356performance for the extra burden of doing more pointer manipulation and an additional allocation per element.
357
358[*Exception safety]. (according to [@http://www.boost.org/community/exception_safety.html Abrahams' terminology])
359As `stable_vector` does not internally copy/move elements around, some
360operations provide stronger exception safety guarantees than in vector:
361
362[table:stable_vector_req Exception safety
363 [[operation] [exception safety for `vector<T>`] [exception safety for `stable_vector<T>`]]
364 [[insert] [strong unless copy/move construction/assignment of `T` throw (basic)] [strong]]
365 [[erase] [no-throw unless copy/move construction/assignment of `T` throw (basic)] [no-throw]]
366]
367
368[*Memory overhead]. The C++ standard does not specifiy requirements on memory consumption, but virtually any implementation
369of `vector` has the same behavior wih respect to memory usage: the memory allocated by a `vector` v with n elements of type T
370is
371
372m[sub v] = c\u2219e,
373
374where c is `v.capacity()` and e is `sizeof(T)`. c can be as low as n if the user has explicitly reserved the exact capacity
375required; otherwise, the average value c for a growing `vector` oscillates between 1.25\u2219n and 1.5\u2219n for typical resizing
376policies. For `stable_vector`, the memory usage is
377
378m[sub sv] = (c + 1)p + (n + 1)(e + p),
379
380where p is the size of a pointer. We have c + 1 and n + 1 rather than c and n because a dummy node is needed at the end of
381the sequence. If we call f the capacity to size ratio c/n and assume that n is large enough, we have that
382
383m[sub sv]/m[sub v] \u2243 (fp + e + p)/fe.
384
385So, `stable_vector` uses less memory than `vector` only when e > p and the capacity to size ratio exceeds a given threshold:
386
387m[sub sv] < m[sub v] <-> f > (e + p)/(e - p). (provided e > p)
388
389This threshold approaches typical values of f below 1.5 when e > 5p; in a 32-bit architecture, when e > 20 bytes.
390
391[*Summary]. `stable_vector` is a drop-in replacement for `vector` providing stability of references and iterators, in exchange
392for missing element contiguity and also some performance and memory overhead. When the element objects are expensive to
393move around, the performance overhead can turn into a net performance gain for `stable_vector` if many middle insertions
394or deletions are performed or if resizing is very frequent. Similarly, if the elements are large there are situations when
395the memory used by `stable_vector` can actually be less than required by vector.
396
397['Note: Text and explanations taken from [@http://bannalia.blogspot.com/2008/09/introducing-stablevector.html Joaqu\u00EDn's blog]]
398
399[endsect]
400
401[section:flat_xxx ['flat_(multi)map/set] associative containers]
402
403Using sorted vectors instead of tree-based associative containers is a well-known technique in
404C++ world. Matt Austern's classic article
405[@http://lafstern.org/matt/col1.pdf Why You Shouldn't Use set, and What You Should Use Instead]
406(C++ Report 12:4, April 2000) was enlightening:
407
408["['Red-black trees aren't the only way to organize data that permits lookup in logarithmic time. One of the basic
409algorithms of computer science is binary search, which works by successively dividing a range in half. Binary
410search is log N and it doesn't require any fancy data structures, just a sorted collection of elements.
411(...) You can use whatever data structure is convenient, so long as it provides STL iterator;
412usually it's easiest to use a C array, or a vector.]]
413
414["['Both std::lower_bound and set::find take time proportional to log N, but the constants of proportionality
415are very different. Using g++ (...) it takes X seconds to perform a million lookups in a
416sorted vector<double> of a million elements, and almost twice as long (...) using a set. Moreover,
417the set uses almost three times as much memory (48 million bytes) as the vector (16.8 million).]]
418
419["['Using a sorted vector instead of a set gives you faster lookup and much faster iteration,
420but at the cost of slower insertion. Insertion into a set, using set::insert, is proportional
421to log N, but insertion into a sorted vector, (...)
422, is proportional to N. Whenever you insert something into a vector,
423vector::insert has to make room by shifting all of the elements that follow it. On average, if you're equally
424likely to insert a new element anywhere, you'll be shifting N/2 elements.]]
425
426["['It may sometimes be convenient to bundle all of this together into a small container adaptor.
427This class does not satisfy the requirements of a Standard Associative Container, since the complexity of insert is
428O(N) rather than O(log N), but otherwise it is almost a drop-in replacement for set.]]
429
430Following Matt Austern's indications, Andrei Alexandrescu's
431[@http://www.bestwebbuys.com/Modern-C-Design-Generic-Programming-and-Design-Patterns-Applied-ISBN-9780201704310?isrc=-rd Modern C++ Design]
432showed `AssocVector`, a `std::map` drop-in
433replacement designed in his [@http://loki-lib.sourceforge.net/ Loki] library:
434
435["['It seems as if we're better off with a sorted vector. The disadvantages of a sorted
436vector are linear-time insertions and linear-time deletions (...). In exchange, a vector
437offers about twice the lookup speed and a much smaller working set (...).
438Loki saves the trouble of maintaining a sorted vector by hand by defining an AssocVector class
439template. AssocVector is a drop-in replacement for std::map (it supports the same set of member
440functions), implemented on top of std::vector. AssocVector differs from a map in the behavior of
441its erase functions (AssocVector::erase invalidates all iterators into the object) and in the
442complexity guarantees of insert and erase (linear as opposed to constant). ]]
443
444[*Boost.Container] `flat_[multi]map/set` containers are ordered, vector-like container based, associative
445containers following Austern's and Alexandrescu's guidelines. These ordered vector containers have also
446benefited with the addition of `move semantics` to C++11, speeding up insertion and
447erasure times considerably. Flat associative containers have the following attributes:
448
449* Faster lookup than standard associative containers
450* Much faster iteration than standard associative containers.
451 Random-access iterators instead of bidirectional iterators.
452* Less memory consumption for small objects (and for big objects if `shrink_to_fit` is used)
453* Improved cache performance (data is stored in contiguous memory)
454* Non-stable iterators (iterators are invalidated when inserting and erasing elements)
455* Non-copyable and non-movable values types can't be stored
456* Weaker exception safety than standard associative containers
457(copy/move constructors can throw when shifting values in erasures and insertions)
458* Slower insertion and erasure than standard associative containers (specially for non-movable types)
459
460[endsect]
461
462[section:slist ['slist]]
463
464When the standard template library was designed, it contained a singly linked list called `slist`.
465Unfortunately, this container was not standardized and remained as an extension for many standard
466library implementations until C++11 introduced `forward_list`, which is a bit different from the
467the original SGI `slist`. According to [@http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/Slist.html SGI STL documentation]:
468
469["['An `slist` is a singly linked list: a list where each element is linked to the next element, but
470not to the previous element. That is, it is a Sequence that supports forward but not backward traversal,
471and (amortized) constant time insertion and removal of elements. Slists, like lists, have the important
472property that insertion and splicing do not invalidate iterators to list elements, and that even removal
473invalidates only the iterators that point to the elements that are removed. The ordering of iterators
474may be changed (that is, slist<T>::iterator might have a different predecessor or successor after a list
475operation than it did before), but the iterators themselves will not be invalidated or made to point to
476different elements unless that invalidation or mutation is explicit.]]
477
478["['The main difference between `slist` and list is that list's iterators are bidirectional iterators,
479while slist's iterators are forward iterators. This means that `slist` is less versatile than list;
480frequently, however, bidirectional iterators are unnecessary. You should usually use `slist` unless
481you actually need the extra functionality of list, because singly linked lists are smaller and faster
482than double linked lists.]]
483
484["['Important performance note: like every other Sequence, `slist` defines the member functions insert and erase.
485Using these member functions carelessly, however, can result in disastrously slow programs. The problem is that
486insert's first argument is an iterator pos, and that it inserts the new element(s) before pos. This means that
487insert must find the iterator just before pos; this is a constant-time operation for list, since list has
488bidirectional iterators, but for `slist` it must find that iterator by traversing the list from the beginning
489up to pos. In other words: insert and erase are slow operations anywhere but near the beginning of the slist.]]
490
491["['Slist provides the member functions insert_after and erase_after, which are constant time operations: you should
492always use insert_after and erase_after whenever possible. If you find that insert_after and erase_after aren't
493adequate for your needs, and that you often need to use insert and erase in the middle of the list, then you
494should probably use list instead of slist.]]
495
496[*Boost.Container] updates the classic `slist` container with C++11 features like move semantics and placement
497insertion and implements it a bit differently than the standard C++ `forward_list`. `forward_list` has no `size()`
498method, so it's been designed to allow (or in practice, encourage) implementations without tracking list size
499with every insertion/erasure, allowing constant-time
500`splice_after(iterator, forward_list &, iterator, iterator)`-based list merging. On the other hand `slist` offers
501constant-time `size()` for those that don't care about linear-time `splice_after(iterator, slist &, iterator, iterator)`
502`size()` and offers an additional `splice_after(iterator, slist &, iterator, iterator, size_type)` method that
503can speed up `slist` merging when the programmer already knows the size. `slist` and `forward_list` are therefore
504complementary.
505
506[endsect]
507
508[section:static_vector ['static_vector]]
509
510`static_vector` is an hybrid between `vector` and `array`: like `vector`, it's a sequence container
511with contiguous storage that can change in size, along with the static allocation, low overhead,
512and fixed capacity of `array`. `static_vector` is based on Adam Wulkiewicz and Andrew Hundt's
513high-performance [@https://svn.boost.org/svn/boost/sandbox/varray/doc/html/index.html varray]
514class.
515
516The number of elements in a `static_vector` may vary dynamically up to a fixed capacity
517because elements are stored within the object itself similarly to an array. However, objects are
518initialized as they are inserted into `static_vector` unlike C arrays or `std::array` which must construct
519all elements on instantiation. The behavior of `static_vector` enables the use of statically allocated
520elements in cases with complex object lifetime requirements that would otherwise not be trivially
521possible. Some other properties:
522
523* Random access to elements
524* Constant time insertion and removal of elements at the end
525* Linear time insertion and removal of elements at the beginning or in the middle.
526
527`static_vector` is well suited for use in a buffer, the internal implementation of other
528classes, or use cases where there is a fixed limit to the number of elements that must be stored.
529Embedded and realtime applications where allocation either may not be available or acceptable
530are a particular case where `static_vector` can be beneficial.
531
532[endsect]
533
534[section:small_vector ['small_vector]]
535
536`small_vector` is a vector-like container optimized for the case when it contains few elements.
537It contains some preallocated elements in-place, which allows it to avoid the use of dynamic storage allocation
538when the actual number of elements is below that preallocated threshold. `small_vector` is inspired by
539[@http://llvm.org/docs/ProgrammersManual.html#llvm-adt-smallvector-h LLVM's `SmallVector`] container.
540Unlike `static_vector`, `small_vector`'s capacity can grow beyond the initial preallocated capacity.
541
542`small_vector<T, N, Allocator>` is convertible to `small_vector_base<T, Allocator>`, a type that is independent
543from the preallocated element count, allowing client code that does not need to be templated on that N argument.
544`small_vector` inherits all `vector`'s member functions so it supports all standard features like emplacement,
545stateful allocators, etc.
546
547[endsect]
548
549[endsect]
550
551[section:extended_functionality Extended functionality: Basic extensions]
552
553[section:default_initialialization Default initialization for vector-like containers]
554
555STL and most other containers value initialize new elements in common operations like
556`vector::resize(size_type n)` or `explicit vector::vector(size_type n)`.
557
558In some performance-sensitive environments, where vectors are used as a replacement for
559variable-size buffers for file or network operations,
560[@http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/value_initialization value initialization]
561is a cost that is not negligible as elements are going to be overwritten by an external source
562shortly after new elements are added to the container.
563
564[*Boost.Container] offers two new members for `vector`, `static_vector` and `stable_vector`:
565`explicit container::container(size_type n, default_init_t)` and
566`container::resize(size_type n, default_init_t)`, where new elements are constructed
567using [@http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/default_initialization default initialization].
568
569[endsect]
570
571[section:ordered_range_insertion Ordered range insertion for associative containers (['ordered_unique_range], ['ordered_range]) ]
572
573When filling associative containers big performance gains can be achieved if the input range to be inserted
574is guaranteed by the user to be ordered according to the predicate. This can happen when inserting values from a `set` to
575a `multiset` or between different associative container families (`[multi]set/map` vs. `flat_[multi]set/map`).
576
577[*Boost.Container] has some overloads for constructors and insertions taking an `ordered_unique_range_t` or
578an `ordered_range_t` tag parameters as the first argument. When an `ordered_unique_range_t` overload is used, the
579user notifies the container that the input range is ordered according to the container predicate and has no
580duplicates. When an `ordered_range_t` overload is used, the
581user notifies the container that the input range is ordered according to the container predicate but it might
582have duplicates. With this information, the container can avoid multiple predicate calls and improve insertion
583times.
584
585[endsect]
586
587[section:constant_time_range_splice Constant-time range splice for `(s)list`]
588
589In the first C++ standard `list::size()` was not required to be constant-time,
590and that caused some controversy in the C++ community. Quoting Howard Hinnant's
591[@http://howardhinnant.github.io/On_list_size.html ['On List Size]] paper:
592
593[: ['There is a considerable debate on whether `std::list<T>::size()` should be O(1) or O(N).
594The usual argument notes that it is a tradeoff with:]
595
596`splice(iterator position, list& x, iterator first, iterator last);`
597
598['If size() is O(1) and this != &x, then this method must perform a linear operation so that it
599can adjust the size member in each list]]
600
601C++11 definitely required `size()` to be O(1), so range splice became O(N). However,
602Howard Hinnant's paper proposed a new `splice` overload so that even O(1) `list:size()`
603implementations could achieve O(1) range splice when the range size was known to the caller:
604
605[: `void splice(iterator position, list& x, iterator first, iterator last, size_type n);`
606
607 [*Effects]: Inserts elements in the range [first, last) before position and removes the elements from x.
608
609 [*Requires]: [first, last) is a valid range in x. The result is undefined if position is an iterator in the range [first, last). Invalidates only the iterators and references to the spliced elements. n == distance(first, last).
610
611 [*Throws]: Nothing.
612
613 [*Complexity]: Constant time.
614]
615
616This new splice signature allows the client to pass the distance of the input range in.
617This information is often available at the call site. If it is passed in,
618then the operation is constant time, even with an O(1) size.
619
620[*Boost.Container] implements this overload for `list` and a modified version of it for `slist`
621(as `slist::size()` is also `O(1)`).
622
623[endsect]
624
625[endsect]
626
627[section:configurable_containers Extended functionality: Configurable containers]
628
629[section:configurable_tree_based_associative_containers Configurable tree-based associative ordered containers]
630
631[classref boost::container::set set], [classref boost::container::multiset multiset],
632[classref boost::container::map map] and [classref boost::container::multimap multimap] associative containers
633are implemented as binary search trees which offer the needed complexity and stability guarantees required by the
634C++ standard for associative containers.
635
636[*Boost.Container] offers the possibility to configure at compile time some parameters of the binary search tree
637implementation. This configuration is passed as the last template parameter and defined using the utility class
638[classref boost::container::tree_assoc_options tree_assoc_options]. The following parameters can be configured:
639
640* The underlying [*tree implementation] type ([classref boost::container::tree_type tree_type]).
641 By default these containers use a red-black tree but the user can use other tree types:
642 * [@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red%E2%80%93black_tree Red-Black Tree]
643 * [@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avl_trees AVL tree]
644 * [@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scapegoat_tree Scapegoat tree]. In this case Insertion and Deletion
645 are amortized O(log n) instead of O(log n).
646 * [@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splay_tree Splay tree]. In this case Searches, Insertions and Deletions
647 are amortized O(log n) instead of O(log n).
648
649* Whether the [*size saving] mechanisms are used to implement the tree nodes
650 ([classref boost::container::optimize_size optimize_size]). By default this option is activated and is only
651 meaningful to red-black and avl trees (in other cases, this option will be ignored).
652 This option will try to put rebalancing metadata inside the "parent" pointer of the node if the pointer
653 type has enough alignment. Usually, due to alignment issues, the metadata uses the size of a pointer yielding
654 to four pointer size overhead per node, whereas activating this option usually leads to 3 pointer size overhead.
655 Although some mask operations must be performed to extract
656 data from this special "parent" pointer, in several systems this option also improves performance due to the
657 improved cache usage produced by the node size reduction.
658
659See the following example to see how [classref boost::container::tree_assoc_options tree_assoc_options] can be
660used to customize these containers:
661
662[import ../example/doc_custom_tree.cpp]
663[doc_custom_tree]
664
665[endsect]
666
667[section:configurable_vectors Configurable vectors]
668
669[*Boost.Container] offers the possibility to configure at compile time some parameters of
670[classref boost::container::vector vector] implementation. This configuration is passed as
671the last template parameter and defined using the utility class
672[classref boost::container::vector_options vector_options]. The following parameters can be configured:
673
674* [classref boost::container::growth_factor growth_factor]: the growth policy of the vector.
675 The rate at which the capacity of a vector grows is implementation dependent and
676 implementations choose exponential growth in order to meet the amortized constant time requirement for push_back.
677 A higher growth factor will make it faster as it will require less data movement, but it will have a greater memory
678 impact (on average, more memory will be unused). A user can provide it's own implementation and some predefined
679 policies are available: [classref boost::container::growth_factor_50 growth_factor_50],
680 [classref boost::container::growth_factor_60 growth_factor_60] and
681 [classref boost::container::growth_factor_50 growth_factor_100].
682
683* [classref boost::container::stored_size stored_size]: the type that will be used to store size-related
684 parameters inside of the vector. Sometimes, when the maximum capacity to be used is much less than the
685 theoretical maximum that a vector can hold, it's interesting to use smaller unsigned integer types to represent
686 `size()` and `capacity()` inside vector, so that the size of an empty vector is minimized and cache
687 performance might be improved. See [classref boost::container::stored_size stored_size] for more details.
688
689See the following example to see how [classref boost::container::vector_options vector_options] can be
690used to customize `vector` container:
691
692[import ../example/doc_custom_vector.cpp]
693[doc_custom_vector]
694
695[endsect]
696
697[endsect]
698
699[section:extended_allocators Extended functionality: Extended allocators]
700
701Many C++ programmers have ever wondered where does good old realloc fit in C++. And that's a good question.
702Could we improve [classref boost::container::vector vector] performance using memory expansion mechanisms
703to avoid too many copies? But [classref boost::container::vector vector] is not the only container that
704could benefit from an improved allocator interface: we could take advantage of the insertion of multiple
705elements in [classref boost::container::list list] using a burst allocation mechanism that could amortize
706costs (mutex locks, free memory searches...) that can't be amortized when using single node allocation
707strategies.
708
709These improvements require extending the STL allocator interface and use make use of a new
710general purpose allocator since new and delete don't offer expansion and burst capabilities.
711
712* [*Boost.Container] containers support an extended allocator interface based on an evolution of proposals
713[@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2006/n1953.html N1953: Upgrading the Interface of Allocators using API Versioning],
714[@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2006/n2045.html N2045: Improving STL allocators]
715and the article
716[@http://www.drivehq.com/web/igaztanaga/allocplus/ Applying classic memory allocation strategies to C++ containers].
717The extended allocator interface is implemented by [classref boost::container::allocator allocator],
718[classref boost::container::adaptive_pool adaptive_pool] and [classref boost::container::node_allocator node_allocator]
719classes.
720
721* Extended allocators use a modified [@http://g.oswego.edu/dl/html/malloc.html Doug Lea Malloc (DLMalloc)] low-level
722allocator and offers an C API to implement memory expansion and burst allocations. DLmalloc is known to be very size
723and speed efficient, and this allocator is used as the basis of many malloc implementations, including multithreaded
724allocators built above DLmalloc (See [@http://www.malloc.de/en/ ptmalloc2, ptmalloc3] or
725[@http://www.nedprod.com/programs/portable/nedmalloc/ nedmalloc]). This low-level allocator is implemented as
726a separately compiled library and the following extended allocators depend on the library:
727
728* [classref boost::container::allocator allocator]: This extended allocator offers expansion, shrink-in place
729 and burst allocation capabilities implemented as a thin wrapper around the modified DLMalloc.
730 It can be used with all containers and it should be the default choice when the programmer wants to use
731 extended allocator capabilities.
732
733* [classref boost::container::node_allocator node_allocator]: It's a
734 [@http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_55_0/libs/pool/doc/html/boost_pool/pool/pooling.html#boost_pool.pool.pooling.simple Simple Segregated Storage]
735 allocator, similar to [*Boost.Pool] that takes advantage of the modified DLMalloc burst interface. It does not return
736 memory to the DLMalloc allocator (and thus, to the system), unless explicitly requested. It does offer a very small
737 memory overhead so it's suitable for node containers ([boost::container::list list], [boost::container::slist slist]
738 [boost::container::set set]...) that allocate very small `value_type`s and it offers improved node allocation times
739 for single node allocations with respecto to [classref boost::container::allocator allocator].
740
741* [classref boost::container::adaptive_pool adaptive_pool]: It's a low-overhead node allocator that can return memory
742 to the system. The overhead can be very low (< 5% for small nodes) and it's nearly as fast as [classref boost::container::node_allocator node_allocator].
743 It's also suitable for node containers.
744
745Use them simply specifying the new allocator in the corresponding template argument of your favourite container:
746
747[import ../example/doc_extended_allocators.cpp]
748[doc_extended_allocators]
749
750[endsect]
751
752[section:cpp_conformance C++11/C++14/C++17 Conformance]
753
754[*Boost.Container] aims for full C++11 conformance except reasoned deviations,
755backporting as much as possible for C++03. Obviously, this conformance is a work
756in progress so this section explains what C++11/C++14/C++17 features are implemented and which
757of them have been backported to earlier standard conformig compilers.
758
759[section:move_emplace Move and Emplace]
760
761For compilers with rvalue references and for those C++03 types that use
762[@http://www.boost.org/libs/move Boost.Move] rvalue reference emulation
763[*Boost.Container] supports all C++11 features related to move semantics: containers
764are movable, requirements for `value_type` are those specified for C++11 containers.
765
766For compilers with variadic templates, [*Boost.Container] supports placement insertion
767(`emplace`, ...) functions from C++11. For those compilers without variadic templates
768support [*Boost.Container] uses the preprocessor to create a set of overloads up to
769a finite number of parameters.
770
771[endsect]
772
773[section:alloc_traits_move_traits Stateful allocators]
774
775C++03 was not stateful-allocator friendly. For compactness of container objects and for
776simplicity, it did not require containers to support allocators with state: Allocator objects
777need not be stored in container objects. It was not possible to store an allocator with state,
778say an allocator that holds a pointer to an arena from which to allocate. C++03 allowed implementors
779to suppose two allocators of the same type always compare equal (that means that memory allocated
780by one allocator object could be deallocated by another instance of the same type) and
781allocators were not swapped when the container was swapped.
782
783C++11 further improves stateful allocator support through
784[@http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/memory/allocator_traits `std::allocator_traits`].
785`std::allocator_traits` is the protocol between a container and an allocator, and
786an allocator writer can customize its behaviour (should the container propagate it in
787move constructor, swap, etc.?) following `allocator_traits` requirements. [*Boost.Container]
788not only supports this model with C++11 but also [*backports it to C++03] via
789[classref boost::container::allocator_traits boost::container::allocator_traits] including some
790C++17 changes. This class
791offers some workarounds for C++03 compilers to achieve the same allocator guarantees as
792`std::allocator_traits`.
793
794In [Boost.Container] containers, if possible, a single allocator is hold to construct
795`value_type`s. If the container needs an auxiliary
796allocator (e.g. an array allocator used by `deque` or `stable_vector`), that allocator is also
797stored in the container and initialized from the user-supplied allocator when the
798container is constructed (i.e. it's not constructed on the fly when auxiliary memory is needed).
799
800[endsect]
801
802[section:scoped_allocator Scoped allocators]
803
804C++11 improves stateful allocators with the introduction of
805[@http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/memory/scoped_allocator_adaptor `std::scoped_allocator_adaptor`]
806class template. `scoped_allocator_adaptor` is instantiated with one outer allocator and zero or more inner
807allocators.
808
809A scoped allocator is a mechanism to automatically propagate the state of the allocator to the subobjects
810of a container in a controlled way. If instantiated with only one allocator type, the inner allocator
811becomes the `scoped_allocator_adaptor` itself, thus using the same allocator
812resource for the container and every element within the container and, if the elements themselves are
813containers, each of their elements recursively. If instantiated with more than one allocator, the first allocator
814is the outer allocator for use by the container, the second allocator is passed to the constructors of the
815container's elements, and, if the elements themselves are containers, the third allocator is passed to the
816elements' elements, and so on.
817
818[*Boost.Container] implements its own [classref boost::container::scoped_allocator_adaptor scoped_allocator_adaptor]
819class and [*backports this feature also
820to C++03 compilers]. Due to C++03 limitations, in those compilers
821the allocator propagation implemented by `scoped_allocator_adaptor::construct` functions
822will be based on traits ([classref boost::container::constructible_with_allocator_suffix constructible_with_allocator_suffix]
823and [classref boost::container::constructible_with_allocator_prefix constructible_with_allocator_prefix])
824proposed in [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/WG21/docs/papers/2008/n2554.pdf
825N2554: The Scoped Allocator Model (Rev 2) proposal]. In conforming C++11 compilers or compilers supporting SFINAE
826expressions (when `BOOST_NO_SFINAE_EXPR` is NOT defined), traits are ignored and C++11 rules
827(`is_constructible<T, Args..., inner_allocator_type>::value` and
828`is_constructible<T, allocator_arg_t, inner_allocator_type, Args...>::value`)
829will be used to detect if the allocator must be propagated with suffix or prefix allocator arguments.
830
831[endsect]
832
833[section:insertion_hints Insertion hints in associative containers and preserving
834 insertion ordering for elements with equivalent keys]
835
836[@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/lwg-defects.html#233 LWG Issue #233] corrected a defect
837in C++98 and specified how equivalent keys were to be inserted in associative containers. [*Boost.Container]
838implements the C++11 changes that were specified in [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2005/n1780.html N1780
839['Comments on LWG issue 233: Insertion hints in associative containers]]:
840
841* `a_eq.insert(t)`: If a range containing elements equivalent to t exists in a_eq, t is inserted at the end of that range.
842* `a_eq.insert(p,t)`: t is inserted as close as possible to the position just prior to p.
843
844[endsect]
845
846[section:initializer_lists Initializer lists]
847
848[*Boost.Container] supports initialization, assignments and insertions from initializer lists
849in compilers that implement this feature.
850
851[endsect]
852
853[section:null_iterators Null Forward Iterators]
854
855[*Boost.Container] implements
856[@http://www.open-std.org/JTC1/sc22/WG21/docs/papers/2013/n3644.pdf C++14 Null Forward Iterators],
857which means that value-initialized iterators may be compared and compare equal
858to other value-initialized iterators of the same type. Value initialized iterators behave as if they refer
859past the end of the same empty sequence (example taken from N3644):
860
861[c++]
862
863 vector<int> v = { ... };
864 auto ni = vector<int>::iterator();
865 auto nd = vector<double>::iterator();
866 ni == ni; // True.
867 nd != nd; // False.
868 v.begin() == ni; // ??? (likely false in practice).
869 v.end() == ni; // ??? (likely false in practice).
870 ni == nd; // Won't compile.
871
872[endsect]
873
874[section:polymorphic_memory_resources Polymorphic Memory Resources ]
875
876The document
877[@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2015/n4480.html C++ Extensions for Library Fundamentals (final draft)]
878includes classes that provide allocator type erasure and runtime polymorphism. As Pablo Halpern, the author of the proposal,
879explains in the paper ([@https://isocpp.org/files/papers/N3916.pdf N3916 Polymorphic Memory Resources (r2)]):
880
881["['A significant impediment to effective memory management in C++ has been the
882inability to use allocators in non-generic contexts. In large software systems,
883most of the application program consists of non-generic procedural or
884object-oriented code that is compiled once and linked many times.]]
885
886["['Allocators in C++, however, have historically relied solely on
887compile-time polymorphism, and therefore have not been suitable for use in vocabulary
888types, which are passed through interfaces between separately-compiled modules,
889because the allocator type necessarily affects the type of the object that uses it.
890This proposal builds upon the improvements made to allocators in
891C++11 and describes a set of facilities for runtime polymorphic memory
892resources that interoperate with the existing compile-time polymorphic
893allocators.]]
894
895Most utilities from the Fundamentals TS were merged into C++17, but
896[*Boost.Container] offers them for C++03, C++11 and C++14 compilers.
897
898[*Boost.Container] implements nearly all classes of the proposal under
899the namespace `boost::container::pmr`. There are two groups,
900
901* Header only utilities (these don't require the separately compiled library):
902 * [classref boost::container::pmr::memory_resource memory_resource].
903 * [classref boost::container::pmr::resource_adaptor resource_adaptor].
904
905* Utilities that require the the separately compiled library:
906 * [classref boost::container::pmr::polymorphic_allocator polymorphic_allocator].
907 * [classref boost::container::pmr::monotonic_buffer_resource monotonic_buffer_resource].
908 * [classref boost::container::pmr::unsynchronized_pool_resource unsynchronized_pool_resource].
909 * [classref boost::container::pmr::synchronized_pool_resource synchronized_pool_resource].
910 * Global resource functions: [funcref boost::container::pmr::get_default_resource get_default_resource]/
911 [funcref boost::container::pmr::set_default_resource set_default_resource]/
912 [funcref boost::container::pmr::new_delete_resource new_delete_resource]/
913 [funcref boost::container::pmr::null_memory_resource null_memory_resource]
914 * Aliases for boost containers using the polymorphic allocator
915 (like [classref boost::container::pmr::vector pmr::vector], etc.)
916
917[*Boost.Container]'s polymorphic resource library is usable from C++03 containers,
918and offers some alternative utilities if the required C++11 features of the
919['Library Fundamentals] specification are not available.
920
921[import ../example/doc_pmr.cpp]
922
923Let's review the usage example given in
924[@https://isocpp.org/files/papers/N3916.pdf N3916] and see how it can be implemented
925using [*Boost.Container]: ['Suppose we are processing a series of shopping lists, where a shopping list is a
926container of strings, and storing them in a collection (a list) of shopping lists.
927Each shopping list being processed uses a bounded amount of memory that is needed for
928a short period of time, while the collection of shopping lists uses an unbounded
929amount of memory and will exist for a longer period of time. For efficiency, we can
930use a more time-efficient memory allocator based on a finite buffer for the temporary
931shopping lists.]
932
933Let's see how `ShoppingList` can be defined to support an polymorphic memory resource
934that can allocate memory from different underlying mechanisms. The most important
935details are:
936
937* It should declare that supports an allocator defining an `allocator_type` typedef.
938 This `allocator_type` will be of type [classref boost::container::pmr::memory_resource memory_resource *],
939 which is a base class for polymorphic resources.
940* It must define constructors that take the
941 the allocator as argument. It can be implemented in two ways:
942 * `ShoppingList` has constructors taking
943 [classref boost::container::pmr::memory_resource memory_resource*] as the last argument.
944 * `ShoppingList` has constructors taking
945 [classref boost::container::allocator_arg_t allocator_arg_t] as the first argument
946 and [classref boost::container::pmr::memory_resource memory_resource*] as the second argument.
947
948[*Note:] ['In C++03 compilers, it is required that the programmer specializes as `true`
949[classref boost::container::constructible_with_allocator_suffix constructible_with_allocator_suffix] or
950[classref boost::container::constructible_with_allocator_prefix constructible_with_allocator_prefix]
951as in C++03 there is no way to automatically detect the chosen option at compile time. If
952no specialization is done, [*Boost.Container] assumes the suffix option].
953
954[doc_pmr_ShoppingList_hpp]
955
956['However, this time-efficient allocator is not appropriate for the longer
957lived collection of shopping lists. This example shows how those temporary shopping
958lists, using a time-efficient allocator, can be used to populate the long lived collection
959of shopping lists, using a general purpose allocator, something that would be
960annoyingly difficult without the polymorphic allocators.]
961
962In [*Boost.Container] for the time-efficient allocation we can use
963[classref boost::container::pmr::monotonic_buffer_resource monotonic_buffer_resource],
964providing an external buffer that will be used until it's exhausted. In the default
965configuration, when the buffer is exhausted, the default memory resource will be used
966instead.
967
968[doc_pmr_main_cpp]
969
970['Notice that the shopping lists within `folder` use the default allocator resource
971whereas the shopping list `temporaryShoppingList` uses the short-lived but very fast
972`buf_rsrc`. Despite using different allocators, you can insert
973`temporaryShoppingList` into folder because they have the same `ShoppingList`
974type. Also, while `ShoppingList` uses memory_resource directly,
975[classref boost::container::pmr::list pmr::list],
976[classref boost::container::pmr::vector pmr::vector]
977and [classref boost::container::pmr::string pmr::string] all use
978[classref boost::container::pmr::polymorphic_allocator polymorphic_allocator].]
979
980['The resource passed to the `ShoppingList` constructor is propagated to the vector and
981each string within that `ShoppingList`. Similarly, the resource used to construct
982`folder` is propagated to the constructors of the ShoppingLists that are inserted into
983the list (and to the strings within those `ShoppingLists`). The
984[classref boost::container::pmr::polymorphic_allocator polymorphic_allocator]
985template is designed to be almost interchangeable with a pointer to
986[classref boost::container::pmr::memory_resource memory_resource],
987thus producing a ['bridge] between the template-policy
988style of allocator and the polymorphic-base-class style of allocator.]
989
990This example actually shows how easy is to use [*Boost.Container] to write
991type-erasured allocator-capable classes even in C++03 compilers.
992
993[endsect]
994
995
996[section:forward_list `forward_list<T>`]
997
998[*Boost.Container] does not offer C++11 `forward_list` container yet, but it will be available in future
999versions.
1000
1001[endsect]
1002
1003[section:vector_exception_guarantees `vector` vs. `std::vector` exception guarantees]
1004
1005[classref boost::container::vector vector] does not support the strong exception guarantees
1006given by `std::vector` in functions like `insert`, `push_back`, `emplace`, `emplace_back`,
1007`resize`, `reserve` or `shrink_to_fit` for either copyable or no-throw moveable classes.
1008In C++11 [@http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/move_if_noexcept move_if_noexcept] is used
1009to maintain C++03 exception safety guarantees combined with C++11 move semantics.
1010This strong exception guarantee degrades the insertion performance of copyable and throwing-moveable types,
1011degrading moves to copies when such types are inserted in the vector using the aforementioned
1012members.
1013
1014This strong exception guarantee also precludes the possibility of using some type of
1015in-place reallocations that can further improve the insertion performance of `vector` See
1016[link container.extended_allocators Extended Allocators] to know more
1017about these optimizations.
1018
1019[classref boost::container::vector vector] always uses move constructors/assignments
1020to rearrange elements in the vector and uses memory expansion mechanisms if the allocator supports them,
1021while offering only basic safety guarantees. It trades off exception guarantees for an improved performance.
1022
1023[endsect]
1024
1025[section:container_const_reference_parameters Parameter taken by const reference that can be changed]
1026
1027Several container operations use a parameter taken by const reference that can be changed during execution of the function.
1028[@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/lwg-closed.html#526 LWG Issue 526
1029 (['Is it undefined if a function in the standard changes in parameters?])]
1030discusses them:
1031
1032[c++]
1033
1034 //Given std::vector<int> v
1035 v.insert(v.begin(), v[2]);
1036 //v[2] can be changed by moving elements of vector
1037
1038 //Given std::list<int> l:
1039 l.remove(*l.begin())
1040 //The operation could delete the first element, and then continue trying to access it.
1041
1042The adopted resolution, NAD (Not A Defect), implies that previous operations must be well-defined. This requires code
1043to detect a reference to an inserted element and an additional copy in that case, impacting performance even when
1044references to already inserted objects are not used. Note that equivalent functions taking rvalue references or
1045iterator ranges require elements not already inserted in the container.
1046
1047[*Boost.Container] prioritizes performance and has not implemented the NAD resolution:
1048in functions that might modify the argument, the library requires references to elements not stored
1049in the container. Using references to inserted elements yields to undefined behaviour (although in debug mode, this
1050precondition violation could be notified via BOOST_ASSERT).
1051
1052[endsect]
1053
1054[section:Vector_bool `vector<bool>` specialization]
1055
1056`vector<bool>` specialization has been quite problematic, and there have been several
1057unsuccessful tries to deprecate or remove it from the standard. [*Boost.Container] does not implement it
1058as there is a superior [@http://www.boost.org/libs/dynamic_bitset/ Boost.DynamicBitset]
1059solution. For issues with `vector<bool>` see the following papers:
1060
1061* [@http://howardhinnant.github.io/onvectorbool.html On `vector<bool>`]
1062* [@http://www.gotw.ca/publications/N1211.pdf vector<bool>: N1211: More Problems, Better Solutions],
1063* [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2007/n2160.html N2160: Library Issue 96: Fixing vector<bool>],
1064* [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2007/n2204.html N2204 A Specification to deprecate vector<bool>].
1065
1066Quotes:
1067
1068* ["['But it is a shame that the C++ committee gave this excellent data structure the name vector<bool> and
1069 that it gives no guidance nor encouragement on the critical generic algorithms that need to be optimized for this
1070 data structure. Consequently, few std::lib implementations go to this trouble.]]
1071
1072* ["['In 1998, admitting that the committee made a mistake was controversial.
1073 Since then Java has had to deprecate such significant portions of their libraries
1074 that the idea C++ would be ridiculed for deprecating a single minor template specialization seems quaint.]]
1075
1076* ["['`vector<bool>` is not a container and `vector<bool>::iterator` is not a random-access iterator
1077(or even a forward or bidirectional iterator either, for that matter). This has already broken user code
1078in the field in mysterious ways.]]
1079
1080* ["['`vector<bool>` forces a specific (and potentially bad) optimization choice on all users by enshrining
1081it in the standard. The optimization is premature; different users have different requirements. This too
1082has already hurt users who have been forced to implement workarounds to disable the 'optimization'
1083(e.g., by using a vector<char> and manually casting to/from bool).]]
1084
1085So `boost::container::vector<bool>::iterator` returns real `bool` references and works as a fully compliant container.
1086If you need a memory optimized version of `boost::container::vector<bool>`, please use
1087[@http://www.boost.org/libs/dynamic_bitset/ Boost.DynamicBitset].
1088
1089[endsect]
1090
1091[section:non_standard_memset_initialization Non-standard value initialization using `std::memset`]
1092
1093[*Boost.Container] uses `std::memset` with a zero value to initialize some types as in most platforms this
1094initialization yields to the desired value initialization with improved performance.
1095
1096Following the C11 standard, [*Boost.Container] assumes that ['for any integer type,
1097the object representation where all the bits are zero shall be a representation of the value
1098zero in that type]. Since `_Bool`/`wchar_t`/`char16_t`/`char32_t` are also integer types in C, it considers
1099all C++ integral types as initializable via `std::memset`.
1100
1101By default, [*Boost.Container] also considers floating point types to be initializable using `std::memset`.
1102Most platforms are compatible with this initialization, but in case this initialization is not desirable the
1103user can `#define BOOST_CONTAINER_MEMZEROED_FLOATING_POINT_IS_NOT_ZERO` before including library headers.
1104
1105By default, it also considers pointer types (pointer and pointer to function types, excluding
1106member object and member function pointers) to be initializable using `std::memset`.
1107Most platforms are compatible with this initialization, but in case this initialization is not desired the
1108user can `#define BOOST_CONTAINER_MEMZEROED_POINTER_IS_NOT_ZERO` before including library headers.
1109
1110If neither `BOOST_CONTAINER_MEMZEROED_FLOATING_POINT_IS_NOT_ZERO` nor
1111`BOOST_CONTAINER_MEMZEROED_POINTER_IS_NOT_ZERO` is defined [*Boost.Container] also considers POD
1112types to be value initializable via `std::memset` with value zero.
1113
1114[endsect]
1115
1116[endsect]
1117
1118[section:known_issues Known Issues]
1119
1120[section:move_emulation_limitations Move emulation limitations in C++03 compilers]
1121
1122[*Boost.Container] uses [*Boost.Move] to implement move semantics both in C++03 and C++11 compilers.
1123However, as explained in
1124[@http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/release/doc/html/move/emulation_limitations.html Emulation limitations],
1125there are some limitations in C++03 compilers that might surprise [*Boost.Container] users.
1126
1127The most noticeable problem is when [*Boost.Container] containers are placed in a struct with a
1128compiler-generated assignment operator:
1129
1130[c++]
1131
1132 class holder
1133 {
1134 boost::container::vector<MyType> vect;
1135 };
1136
1137 void func(const holder& h)
1138 {
1139 holder copy_h(h); //<--- ERROR: can't convert 'const holder&' to 'holder&'
1140 //Compiler-generated copy constructor is non-const:
1141 // holder& operator(holder &)
1142 //!!!
1143 }
1144
1145This limitation forces the user to define a const version of the copy assignment, in all classes
1146holding containers, which might be annoying in some cases.
1147
1148[endsect]
1149
1150[endsect]
1151
1152[section:history_and_reasons History and reasons to use Boost.Container]
1153
1154[section:boost_container_history Boost.Container history]
1155
1156[*Boost.Container] is a product of a long development effort that started
1157[@http://lists.boost.org/Archives/boost/2004/11/76263.php in 2004 with the experimental Shmem library],
1158which pioneered the use of standard containers in shared memory. Shmem included modified SGI STL container
1159code tweaked to support non-raw `allocator::pointer` types and stateful allocators. Once reviewed,
1160Shmem was accepted as [@http://www.boost.org/libs/interprocess/ Boost.Interprocess] and this library
1161continued to refine and improve those containers.
1162
1163In 2007, container code from node containers (`map`, `list`, `slist`) was rewritten, refactored
1164and expanded to build the intrusive container library [@http://www.boost.org/libs/intrusive/ Boost.Intrusive].
1165[*Boost.Interprocess] containers were refactored to take advantage of [*Boost.Intrusive] containers and
1166code duplication was minimized. Both libraries continued to gain support and bug fixes for years.
1167They introduced move semantics, emplacement insertion and more features of then unreleased C++0x
1168standard.
1169
1170[*Boost.Interprocess] containers were always standard compliant, and those containers and new
1171containers like `stable_vector` and `flat_[multi]set/map` were used outside [*Boost.Interprocess]
1172with success. As containers were mature enough to get their own library, it was a natural step to
1173collect them containers and build [*Boost.Container], a library targeted to a wider audience.
1174
1175[endsect]
1176
1177
1178[section:Why_boost_container Why Boost.Container?]
1179
1180With so many high quality standard library implementations out there, why would you want to
1181use [*Boost.Container]? There are several reasons for that:
1182
1183* Even if you have a earlier standard conforming compiler, you still can have access to many
1184 of the latest C++ standard features and have an easy code migration when you change your compiler.
1185* It's compatible with [*Boost.Interprocess] shared memory allocators.
1186* You have extremely useful new containers like `[stable/static/small]_vector` and `flat_[multi]set/map`.
1187* If you work on multiple platforms, you'll have a portable behaviour without depending
1188 on the std-lib implementation conformance of each platform. Some examples:
1189 * Default constructors don't allocate memory at all, which improves performance and
1190 usually implies a no-throw guarantee (if predicate's or allocator's default constructor doesn't throw).
1191 * Small string optimization for [classref boost::container::basic_string basic_string].
1192* [link container.extended_functionality Extended functionality] beyond the standard based
1193 on user feedback to improve code performance.
1194* You need a portable implementation that works when compiling without exceptions support or
1195 you need to customize the error handling when a container needs to signal an exceptional error.
1196
1197[endsect]
1198
1199[endsect]
1200
1201[include auto_index_helpers.qbk]
1202
1203[section:index Indexes]
1204
1205[named_index class_name Class Index]
1206[named_index typedef_name Typedef Index]
1207[named_index function_name Function Index]
1208[/named_index macro_name Macro Index]
1209[/index]
1210
1211[endsect]
1212
1213[xinclude autodoc.xml]
1214
1215[section:acknowledgements_notes Acknowledgements, notes and links]
1216
1217* Original standard container code comes from [@http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/ SGI STL library],
1218 which enhanced the original HP STL code. Code was rewritten for
1219 [*Boost.Interprocess] and moved to [*Boost.Intrusive]. Many thanks to Alexander Stepanov, Meng Lee, David Musser,
1220 Matt Austern... and all HP and SGI STL developers.
1221
1222* `flat_[multi]_map/set` containers were originally based on [@http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loki_%28C%2B%2B%29 Loki's]
1223 AssocVector class. Code was rewritten and expanded for [*Boost.Interprocess], so thanks to Andrei Alexandrescu.
1224
1225* `stable_vector` was invented and coded by
1226 [@http://bannalia.blogspot.com/2008/09/introducing-stablevector.html Joaqu\u00EDn M. L\u00F3pez Mu\u00F1oz],
1227 then adapted for [*Boost.Interprocess]. Thanks for such a great container.
1228
1229* `static_vector` was based on Andrew Hundt's and Adam Wulkiewicz's high-performance `varray` class.
1230 Many performance improvements of `vector` were also inspired by their implementation. Thanks!
1231
1232* Howard Hinnant's help and advices were essential when implementing move semantics,
1233 improving allocator support or implementing small string optimization. Thanks Howard
1234 for your wonderful standard library implementations.
1235
1236* And finally thanks to all Boosters who helped all these years, improving, fixing and
1237 reviewing all my libraries.
1238
1239[endsect]
1240
1241[section:release_notes Release Notes]
1242
1243[section:release_notes_boost_1_68_00 Boost 1.68 Release]
1244
1245* Improved correctness of [classref boost::container::adaptive_pool adaptive_pool] and many parameters are now compile-time
1246 constants instead of runtime constants.
1247
1248* Implemented C++14's heterogeneous lookup functions for `[multi]map/[multi]set/flat_[multi]map/flat_[multi]set`.
1249
1250* Added [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/71 GitHub #71: ['"Constructor Template Auto Deduction guides "]].
1251
1252* Fixed bugs:
1253 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/13533 Trac #13533: ['"Boost vector resize causes assert(false)"]].
1254 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/issues/73 GitHub #73: ['"triviality of pair"]].
1255 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/issues/74 GitHub #74: ['"vector assignment not using memcpy"]].
1256 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/issues/75 GitHub #75: ['"flat_set: Heap overflow"]].
1257 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/issues/76 GitHub #76: ['"flat_set: undefined behaviour on empty range"]].
1258 * Fixed race condition bug in [classref boost::container::pmr::unsynchronized_pool_resource unsynchronized_pool_resource]
1259 found by Arthur O'Dowyer in his blog post
1260 [@https://quuxplusone.github.io/blog/2018/06/05/libcpp-memory-resource/ <memory_resource> for libc++]
1261
1262* Implemented proposed resolution for
1263 [@https://cplusplus.github.io/LWG/issue3120 ['"LWG 3120 Unclear behavior of monotonic_buffer_resource::release()"]].
1264 After `release()` the original buffer is recovered for the next allocation.
1265
1266[endsect]
1267
1268[section:release_notes_boost_1_67_00 Boost 1.67 Release]
1269
1270* ['vector] can now have options, using [classref boost::container::vector_options vector_options].
1271 The growth factor and the stored size type can be specified.
1272
1273* Improved range insertion in ['flat_[multi]map/set] containers overall complexity is reduced to O(NlogN).
1274
1275* Fixed bugs:
1276 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/61 GitHub #61: ['"Compile problems on Android ndk r16 beta 1"]].
1277 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/64 GitHub #64: ['"Fix splice for slist"]].
1278 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/issues/58 GitHub #65: ['"`pmr::monotonic_buffer_resource::allocate()` can return a pointer to freed memory after `release()` is called"]].
1279 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/13500 Trac #13500: ['"Memory leak when using erase on string vectors"]].
1280
1281[endsect]
1282
1283[section:release_notes_boost_1_66_00 Boost 1.66 Release]
1284
1285* ['flat_[multi]map/set] can now work as container adaptors, as proposed in [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2017/p0429r1.pdf P0429R1].
1286 The allocator argument is checked for ['size()] and ['empty()] members. If so, the argument is interpreted as the required underlying container.
1287 This means that ['static_vector], ['stable_vector] and ['small_vector] can be used now with flat associative containers.
1288
1289* Fixed bugs:
1290 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/54 GitHub #54: ['"no sbrk() in VxWorks, configure dlmalloc to use only mmap"]].
1291 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/issues/58 GitHub #58: ['"Comparing strings does not compile in gcc 7+ in C++17 mode"]].
1292 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/issues/59 GitHub #59: ['"basic_string::npos is missing its definition"]].
1293
1294[endsect]
1295
1296[section:release_notes_boost_1_65_00 Boost 1.65 Release]
1297
1298* Implemented `extract_sequence`, `adopt_sequence` functions for flat_[multi]map/set associative containers.
1299
1300* Fixed bugs:
1301 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/48 GitHub #48: ['"Replace deprecated/removed C++98 binders"]].
1302 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/49 GitHub #49: ['"Remove useless allocator copy in map"]].
1303 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/50 GitHub #50: ['"Fixed bug Trac #13038"]].
1304 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/51 GitHub #51: ['"Fix integer rollover that triggers clang ubsan when U is unsigned"]].
1305
1306[endsect]
1307
1308[section:release_notes_boost_1_64_00 Boost 1.64 Release]
1309
1310* Fixed bugs:
1311 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11333 Trac #11333: ['"boost::basic_string_ref should interop with boost::container::basic_string"]].
1312 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12749 Trac #12749: ['"container::pmr::polymorphic_allocator compilation error"]].
1313 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12915 Trac #12915: ['"Buffer overflow in boost::container::vector (affects flat_set)"]].
1314 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/45 GitHub #45: ['"emplace_back must return reference to back(), not to *end()"]].
1315 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/46 GitHub #46: ['"Fix use of propagate_on_container_swap"]].
1316
1317[endsect]
1318
1319[section:release_notes_boost_1_63_00 Boost 1.63 Release]
1320
1321* Fixed bugs:
1322 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12534 Trac #12534: ['"flat_map fails to compile if included after type_traits is instantiated under gcc"]].
1323 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12577 Trac #12577: ['"Null reference in pair.hpp triggers runtime warning with -fsanitize=undefined"]].
1324 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/41 GitHub #40: ['Fix parameter types in copy_move_algo.hpp: iterator_traits::difference_type -> allocator_traits::size_type]].
1325 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/41 GitHub #41: ['Avoid -Wunreachable-code in do_allocate()]].
1326
1327[endsect]
1328
1329[section:release_notes_boost_1_62_00 Boost 1.62 Release]
1330
1331* Fixed bugs:
1332 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9481 Trac #9481: ['"Minor comment typo in Boost.Container"]].
1333 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9689 Trac #9689: ['"Add piecewise_construct to boost::container"]].
1334 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11170 Trac #11170: ['"Doc slip for index_of"]].
1335 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11802 Trac #11802: ['"Incorrect ordering after using insert() with ordered_range_t on a flat_multiset with a non-default sort order"]].
1336 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12117 Trac #12117: ['"flat_set constructor with ordered_unique_range"]].
1337 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12177 Trac #12177: ['"vector::priv_merge uses unqualified uintptr_t"]].
1338 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12183 Trac #12183: ['"GCC 6.1 thinks boost::container::string violates strict aliasing"]].
1339 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12256 Trac #12256: ['"set<std::pair<int,int>>::insert cause compilation error in debug configuration in Visual Studio 2012"]].
1340 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12273 Trac #12273: ['"static_vector max_size() and capacity() should be constant expressions"]].
1341 Added constant `static_vector<>::static_capacity` to use the configured capacity in constant expressions.
1342 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12286 Trac #12286: ['"PMR flat_map from Boost Container does not compile"]].
1343 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12296 Trac #12296: ['"{deque,string} combine for a memory leak"]].
1344 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12319 Trac #12319: ['"flat_set` should be nothrow move constructible"]].
1345
1346* Revised noexcept expressions of default and move constructors in all containers.
1347* Implemented C++17's `insert_or_assign`/`try_emplace` for [classref boost::container::map map] and [classref boost::container::flat_map flat_map].
1348* Implemented C++17's [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2016/p0083r3.pdf ['Splicing Maps and Sets (Revision 5)]]
1349 for [classref boost::container::map map], [classref boost::container::multimap multimap],
1350 [classref boost::container::set set], [classref boost::container::multiset multiset].
1351* Implemented C++17's [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2016/p0084r2.pdf ['P0084R2 Emplace Return Type]]
1352 in `deque`, `vector`, `stable_vector`, `small_vector`, `static_vector`, `list` and `slist`.
1353
1354[endsect]
1355
1356[section:release_notes_boost_1_61_00 Boost 1.61 Release]
1357
1358* [classref boost::container::small_vector] supports more constructors and assignments.
1359* Fixed bugs:
1360 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11820 Trac #11820: ['"compiler error when using operator[] of map"]].
1361 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11856 Trac #11856: ['"pool_resource.cpp error: declaration changes meaning"]].
1362 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11866 Trac #11866: ['"small_vector does not have range constructor"]].
1363 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11867 Trac #11867: ['"small_vector should have constructor and assignment operator taking other small_vector"]].
1364 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11912 Trac #11912: ['"flat_map use of vector::priv_forward_range_insert_expand_backwards may cause move with same source"]].
1365 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11957 Trac #11957: ['"static_vector::max_size() is higher than the capacity"]].
1366 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/12014 Trac #12014: ['"boost::container::set can not insert const (ref) range"]].
1367 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/33 GitHub #33: ['Make sure std::string constructor is available]].
1368
1369[endsect]
1370
1371[section:release_notes_boost_1_60_00 Boost 1.60 Release]
1372
1373* Implemented [link container.cpp_conformance.polymorphic_memory_resources Polymorphic Memory Resources].
1374* Add more BOOST_ASSERT checks to test preconditions in some operations (like `pop_back`, `pop_front`, `back`, `front`, etc.)
1375* Added C++11 `back`/`front` operations to [classref boost::container::basic_string basic_string].
1376* Fixed bugs:
1377 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11627 Trac #11627: ['"small_vector<T,n>::swap() appears to be broken"]].
1378 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11628 Trac #11628: ['"small_vector<int,n> iterates over elements in destructor"]].
1379 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11697 Trac #11697: ['"Wrong initialization order in tuple copy-constructor"]].
1380 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11698 Trac #11698: ['"Missing return statement in static_storage_allocator"]].
1381 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/29 GitHub #29: ['Doc fixes for flap_map complexity requirements]].
1382 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/31 GitHub #31: ['DL_SIZE_IMPL also dereference addr]].
1383
1384[endsect]
1385
1386[section:release_notes_boost_1_59_00 Boost 1.59 Release]
1387
1388* [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/26 GitHub #26: ['Fix bug in stable_vector::capacity()]]. Thanks to timsong-cpp/Arindam Mukerjee.
1389* [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/27 GitHub #27: ['fix stable_vector's index_of's doxygen comment]]. Thanks to kariya-mitsuru.
1390* [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11380 Trac #11380: ['"Container library std forward declarations incorrect in std_fwd.hpp on libc++ with gcc"]].
1391* [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11388 Trac #11388: ['"boost::container::list::emplace_back broken on Visual Studio 2010"]].
1392* [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11339 Trac #11339: ['"VC12 LNK2005 error with boost::container::adaptive_pool"]].
1393
1394[endsect]
1395
1396[section:release_notes_boost_1_58_00 Boost 1.58 Release]
1397* Experimental [classref boost::container::small_vector small_vector] container.
1398* Massive dependency reorganization. Now [*Boost.Container] depends on very basic utilities like Boost.Core
1399 and [*Boost.Intrusive]. Preprocessed code size have decreased considerably and compilation times have improved.
1400* Added `nth` and `index_of` functions to containers with random-access iterators (except `basic_string`).
1401* Added C++17's `allocator_traits<Allocator>::is_always_equal`.
1402* Updated containers to implement new constructors as specified in
1403 [@http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/lwg-defects.html#2210 2210. Missing allocator-extended constructor for allocator-aware containers].
1404* Fixed bugs:
1405 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9931 Trac #9931: ['"flat_map::insert(ordered_unique_range_t...) fails with move_iterators"]] (reopened).
1406 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11076 Trac #11076: ['"Unqualified calls to memmove/memcpy in container/detail/copy_move_algo.hpp"]].
1407 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/10790 Trac #10790 (['"long long errors from container"])].
1408 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/10808 Trac #10808 (['"compare equal operator of vector is broken"])].
1409 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/10930 Trac #10930 (['"container std_fwd.hpp neglects custom std namespaces"])].
1410 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/11139 Trac #11139 (['"boost::container::vector<std::shared_ptr<const T>...>::const_iterator allows changing dereferenced elements"])].
1411* [*Source Breaking]: [classref boost::container::scoped_allocator_adaptor scoped_allocator_adaptor]'s
1412 `propagate_on_container_copy_assignment`, `propagate_on_container_move_assignment` and `propagate_on_container_swap`
1413 are no longer `::boost::integral_constant<bool, true/false>` types. The dependency reorganization needed to break
1414 with those classes to avoid MPL dependencies, and interoperability with `std::integral_constant` was not guaranteed.
1415 Code assumming `boost::true_type/boost::false_type` on this will not compile. As a workaround, use the guaranteed internal
1416 `::value` constant: `::boost::integral_constant<bool, scoped_allocator_adaptor<Allocator>::propagate_on_container_move_assignment::value>`.
1417
1418[endsect]
1419
1420[section:release_notes_boost_1_57_00 Boost 1.57 Release]
1421* Added support for `initializer_list`. Contributed by Robert Matusewicz.
1422* Fixed double destruction bugs in vector and backward expansion capable allocators.
1423* Fixed bugs:
1424 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/10263 Trac #10263 (['"AIX 6.1 bug with sched_yield() function out of scope"])].
1425 * [@https://github.com/boostorg/container/pull/16 GitHub #16: ['Fix iterators of incomplete type containers]]. Thanks to Mikael Persson.
1426
1427[endsect]
1428
1429[section:release_notes_boost_1_56_00 Boost 1.56 Release]
1430
1431* Added DlMalloc-based [link container.extended_allocators Extended Allocators].
1432
1433* [link container.configurable_containers.configurable_tree_based_associative_containers Improved configurability]
1434 of tree-based ordered associative containers. AVL, Scapegoat and Splay trees are now available
1435 to implement [classref boost::container::set set], [classref boost::container::multiset multiset],
1436 [classref boost::container::map map] and [classref boost::container::multimap multimap].
1437
1438* Fixed bugs:
1439 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9338 #9338: ['"VS2005 compiler errors in swap() definition after including container/memory_util.hpp"]].
1440 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9637 #9637: ['"Boost.Container vector::resize() performance issue"]].
1441 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9648 #9648: ['"string construction optimization - char_traits::copy could be used ..."]].
1442 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9801 #9801: ['"I can no longer create and iterator_range from a stable_vector"]].
1443 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9915 #9915: ['"Documentation issues regarding vector constructors and resize methods - value/default initialization"]].
1444 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9916 #9916: ['"Allocator propagation incorrect in the assignment operator of most"]].
1445 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9931 #9931: ['"flat_map::insert(ordered_unique_range_t...) fails with move_iterators"]].
1446 * [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9955 #9955: ['"Using memcpy with overlapped buffers in vector"]].
1447
1448[endsect]
1449
1450[section:release_notes_boost_1_55_00 Boost 1.55 Release]
1451
1452* Implemented [link container.main_features.scary_iterators SCARY iterators].
1453
1454* Fixed bugs [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/8269 #8269],
1455 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/8473 #8473],
1456 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/8892 #8892],
1457 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9009 #9009],
1458 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9064 #9064],
1459 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9092 #9092],
1460 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9108 #9108],
1461 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/9166 #9166].
1462
1463* Added `default initialization` insertion functions to vector-like containers
1464 with new overloads taking `default_init_t` as an argument instead of `const value_type &`.
1465
1466[endsect]
1467
1468[section:release_notes_boost_1_54_00 Boost 1.54 Release]
1469
1470* Added experimental `static_vector` class, based on Andrew Hundt's and Adam Wulkiewicz's
1471 high performance `varray` class.
1472* Speed improvements in `vector` constructors/copy/move/swap, dispatching to memcpy when possible.
1473* Support for `BOOST_NO_EXCEPTIONS` [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7227 #7227].
1474* Fixed bugs [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7921 #7921],
1475 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7969 #7969],
1476 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/8118 #8118],
1477 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/8294 #8294],
1478 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/8553 #8553],
1479 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/8724 #8724].
1480
1481[endsect]
1482
1483[section:release_notes_boost_1_53_00 Boost 1.53 Release]
1484
1485* Fixed bug [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7650 #7650].
1486* Improved `vector`'s insertion performance.
1487* Changed again experimental multiallocation interface for better performance (still experimental).
1488* Added no exception support for those willing to disable exceptions in their compilers.
1489* Fixed GCC -Wshadow warnings.
1490* Replaced deprecated BOOST_NO_XXXX with newer BOOST_NO_CXX11_XXX macros.
1491
1492[endsect]
1493
1494[section:release_notes_boost_1_52_00 Boost 1.52 Release]
1495
1496* Improved `stable_vector`'s template code bloat and type safety.
1497* Changed typedefs and reordered functions of sequence containers to improve doxygen documentation.
1498* Fixed bugs
1499 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6615 #6615],
1500 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7139 #7139],
1501 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7215 #7215],
1502 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7232 #7232],
1503 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7269 #7269],
1504 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7439 #7439].
1505* Implemented LWG Issue #149 (range insertion now returns an iterator) & cleaned up insertion code in most containers
1506* Corrected aliasing errors.
1507
1508[endsect]
1509
1510[section:release_notes_boost_1_51_00 Boost 1.51 Release]
1511
1512* Fixed bugs
1513 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6763 #6763],
1514 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6803 #6803],
1515 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7114 #7114],
1516 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7103 #7103].
1517 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/7123 #7123],
1518
1519[endsect]
1520
1521[section:release_notes_boost_1_50_00 Boost 1.50 Release]
1522
1523* Added Scoped Allocator Model support.
1524
1525* Fixed bugs
1526 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6606 #6606],
1527 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6533 #6533],
1528 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6536 #6536],
1529 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6566 #6566],
1530 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6575 #6575],
1531
1532[endsect]
1533
1534
1535[section:release_notes_boost_1_49_00 Boost 1.49 Release]
1536
1537* Fixed bugs
1538 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6540 #6540],
1539 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6499 #6499],
1540 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6336 #6336],
1541 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6335 #6335],
1542 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6287 #6287],
1543 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/6205 #6205],
1544 [@https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/4383 #4383].
1545
1546* Added `allocator_traits` support for both C++11 and C++03
1547 compilers through an internal `allocator_traits` clone.
1548
1549[endsect]
1550
1551[section:release_notes_boost_1_48_00 Boost 1.48 Release]
1552
1553* First release. Container code from [*Boost.Interprocess] was deleted
1554 and redirected to [*Boost.Container ] via using directives.
1555
1556[endsect]
1557
1558[endsect]