/* Copyright (C) 2015-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #ifndef GDBSUPPORT_ENUM_FLAGS_H #define GDBSUPPORT_ENUM_FLAGS_H #include "traits.h" /* Type-safe wrapper for enum flags. enum flags are enums where the values are bits that are meant to be ORed together. This allows writing code like the below, while with raw enums this would fail to compile without casts to enum type at the assignments to 'f': enum some_flag { flag_val1 = 1 << 1, flag_val2 = 1 << 2, flag_val3 = 1 << 3, flag_val4 = 1 << 4, }; DEF_ENUM_FLAGS_TYPE(enum some_flag, some_flags); some_flags f = flag_val1 | flag_val2; f |= flag_val3; It's also possible to assign literal zero to an enum flags variable (meaning, no flags), dispensing adding an awkward explicit "no value" value to the enumeration. For example: some_flags f = 0; f |= flag_val3 | flag_val4; Note that literal integers other than zero fail to compile: some_flags f = 1; // error */ /* Use this to mark an enum as flags enum. It defines FLAGS_TYPE as enum_flags wrapper class for ENUM, and enables the global operator overloads for ENUM. */ #define DEF_ENUM_FLAGS_TYPE(enum_type, flags_type) \ using flags_type = enum_flags; \ void is_enum_flags_enum_type (enum_type *) /* To enable the global enum_flags operators for enum, declare an "is_enum_flags_enum_type" overload that has exactly one parameter, of type a pointer to that enum class. E.g.,: void is_enum_flags_enum_type (enum some_flag *); The function does not need to be defined, only declared. DEF_ENUM_FLAGS_TYPE declares this. A function declaration is preferred over a traits type, because the former allows calling the DEF_ENUM_FLAGS_TYPE macro inside a namespace to define the corresponding enum flags type in that namespace. The compiler finds the corresponding is_enum_flags_enum_type function via ADL. */ namespace enum_flags_detail { /* Private type used to support initializing flag types with zero: foo_flags f = 0; but not other integers: foo_flags f = 1; The way this works is that we define an implicit constructor that takes a pointer to this private type. Since nothing can instantiate an object of this type, the only possible pointer to pass to the constructor is the NULL pointer, or, zero. */ struct zero_type; /* gdb::Requires trait helpers. */ template using EnumIsUnsigned = std::is_unsigned::type>; /* Helper to detect whether an enum has a fixed underlying type. This can be achieved by using a scoped enum (in which case the type is "int") or an explicit underlying type. C-style enums that are unscoped or do not have an explicit underlying type have an implementation-defined underlying type. https://timsong-cpp.github.io/cppwp/n4659/dcl.enum#5 We need this trait in order to ensure that operator~ below does NOT operate on old-style enums. This is because we apply operator~ on the value and then cast the result to the enum_type. This is however Undefined Behavior if the result does not fit in the range of possible values for the enum. For enums with fixed underlying type, the entire range of the integer is available. However, for old-style enums, the range is only the smallest bit-field that can hold all the values of the enumeration, typically much smaller than the underlying integer: https://timsong-cpp.github.io/cppwp/n4659/expr.static.cast#10 https://timsong-cpp.github.io/cppwp/n4659/dcl.enum#8 To implement this, we leverage the fact that, since C++17, enums with fixed underlying type can be list-initialized from an integer: https://timsong-cpp.github.io/cppwp/n4659/dcl.init.list#3.7 Old-style enums cannot be initialized like that, leading to ill-formed code. We then use this together with SFINAE to create the desired trait. */ template struct EnumHasFixedUnderlyingType : std::false_type { static_assert(std::is_enum::value); }; /* Specialization that is active only if enum_type can be list-initialized from an integer (0). Only enums with fixed underlying type satisfy this property in C++17. */ template struct EnumHasFixedUnderlyingType> : std::true_type { static_assert(std::is_enum::value); }; template using EnumIsSafeForBitwiseComplement = std::conjunction< EnumIsUnsigned, EnumHasFixedUnderlyingType >; template using EnumIsUnsafeForBitwiseComplement = std::negation>; } template class enum_flags { public: using enum_type = E; using underlying_type = typename std::underlying_type::type; /* For to_string. Maps one enumerator of E to a string. */ struct string_mapping { E flag; const char *str; }; /* Convenience for to_string implementations, to build a string_mapping array. */ #define MAP_ENUM_FLAG(ENUM_FLAG) { ENUM_FLAG, #ENUM_FLAG } public: /* Allow default construction. */ constexpr enum_flags () : m_enum_value ((enum_type) 0) {} /* The default move/copy ctor/assignment do the right thing. */ /* If you get an error saying these two overloads are ambiguous, then you tried to mix values of different enum types. */ constexpr enum_flags (enum_type e) : m_enum_value (e) {} constexpr enum_flags (enum_flags_detail::zero_type *zero) : m_enum_value ((enum_type) 0) {} enum_flags &operator&= (enum_flags e) & { m_enum_value = (enum_type) (m_enum_value & e.m_enum_value); return *this; } enum_flags &operator|= (enum_flags e) & { m_enum_value = (enum_type) (m_enum_value | e.m_enum_value); return *this; } enum_flags &operator^= (enum_flags e) & { m_enum_value = (enum_type) (m_enum_value ^ e.m_enum_value); return *this; } /* Delete rval versions. */ void operator&= (enum_flags e) && = delete; void operator|= (enum_flags e) && = delete; void operator^= (enum_flags e) && = delete; /* Like raw enums, allow conversion to the underlying type. */ constexpr operator underlying_type () const { return m_enum_value; } /* Get the underlying value as a raw enum. */ constexpr enum_type raw () const { return m_enum_value; } /* Binary operations involving some unrelated type (which would be a bug) are implemented as non-members, and deleted. */ /* Convert this object to a std::string, using MAPPING as enumerator-to-string mapping array. This is not meant to be called directly. Instead, enum_flags specializations should have their own to_string function wrapping this one, thus hiding the mapping array from callers. Note: this is defined outside the template class so it can use the global operators for enum_type, which are only defined after the template class. */ template std::string to_string (const string_mapping (&mapping)[N]) const; private: /* Stored as enum_type because GDB knows to print the bit flags neatly if the enum values look like bit flags. */ enum_type m_enum_value; }; template using is_enum_flags_enum_type_t = decltype (is_enum_flags_enum_type (std::declval ())); /* Global operator overloads. */ /* Generate binary operators. */ #define ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_BINOP(OPERATOR_OP, OP) \ \ /* Raw enum on both LHS/RHS. Returns raw enum type. */ \ template > \ constexpr enum_type \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_type e1, enum_type e2) \ { \ using underlying = typename enum_flags::underlying_type; \ return (enum_type) (underlying (e1) OP underlying (e2)); \ } \ \ /* enum_flags on the LHS. */ \ template > \ constexpr enum_flags \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_flags e1, enum_type e2) \ { return e1.raw () OP e2; } \ \ /* enum_flags on the RHS. */ \ template > \ constexpr enum_flags \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_type e1, enum_flags e2) \ { return e1 OP e2.raw (); } \ \ /* enum_flags on both LHS/RHS. */ \ template > \ constexpr enum_flags \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_flags e1, enum_flags e2) \ { return e1.raw () OP e2.raw (); } \ \ /* Delete cases involving unrelated types. */ \ \ template > \ constexpr enum_flags \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_type e1, unrelated_type e2) = delete; \ \ template > \ constexpr enum_flags \ OPERATOR_OP (unrelated_type e1, enum_type e2) = delete; \ \ template > \ constexpr enum_flags \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_flags e1, unrelated_type e2) = delete; \ \ template > \ constexpr enum_flags \ OPERATOR_OP (unrelated_type e1, enum_flags e2) = delete; /* Generate non-member compound assignment operators. Only the raw enum versions are defined here. The enum_flags versions are defined as member functions, simply because it's less code that way. Note we delete operators that would allow e.g., "enum_type | 1" or "enum_type1 | enum_type2" because that would allow a mistake like : enum flags1 { F1_FLAGS1 = 1 }; enum flags2 { F2_FLAGS2 = 2 }; enum flags1 val; switch (val) { case F1_FLAGS1 | F2_FLAGS2: ... If you really need to 'or' enumerators of different flag types, cast to integer first. */ #define ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_COMPOUND_ASSIGN(OPERATOR_OP, OP) \ /* lval reference version. */ \ template > \ constexpr enum_type & \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_type &e1, enum_type e2) \ { return e1 = e1 OP e2; } \ \ /* rval reference version. */ \ template > \ void \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_type &&e1, enum_type e2) = delete; \ \ /* Delete compound assignment from unrelated types. */ \ \ template > \ constexpr enum_type & \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_type &e1, other_enum_type e2) = delete; \ \ template > \ void \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_type &&e1, other_enum_type e2) = delete; ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_BINOP (operator|, |) ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_BINOP (operator&, &) ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_BINOP (operator^, ^) ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_COMPOUND_ASSIGN (operator|=, |) ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_COMPOUND_ASSIGN (operator&=, &) ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_COMPOUND_ASSIGN (operator^=, ^) /* Allow comparison with enum_flags, raw enum, and integers, only. The latter case allows "== 0". As side effect, it allows comparing with integer variables too, but that's not a common mistake to make. It's important to disable comparison with unrelated types to prevent accidentally comparing with unrelated enum values, which are convertible to integer, and thus coupled with enum_flags conversion to underlying type too, would trigger the built-in 'bool operator==(unsigned, int)' operator. */ #define ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_COMP(OPERATOR_OP, OP) \ \ /* enum_flags OP enum_flags */ \ \ template \ constexpr bool \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_flags lhs, enum_flags rhs) \ { return lhs.raw () OP rhs.raw (); } \ \ /* enum_flags OP other */ \ \ template \ constexpr bool \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_flags lhs, enum_type rhs) \ { return lhs.raw () OP rhs; } \ \ template \ constexpr bool \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_flags lhs, int rhs) \ { return lhs.raw () OP rhs; } \ \ template \ constexpr bool \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_flags lhs, U rhs) = delete; \ \ /* other OP enum_flags */ \ \ template \ constexpr bool \ OPERATOR_OP (enum_type lhs, enum_flags rhs) \ { return lhs OP rhs.raw (); } \ \ template \ constexpr bool \ OPERATOR_OP (int lhs, enum_flags rhs) \ { return lhs OP rhs.raw (); } \ \ template \ constexpr bool \ OPERATOR_OP (U lhs, enum_flags rhs) = delete; ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_COMP (operator==, ==) ENUM_FLAGS_GEN_COMP (operator!=, !=) /* Unary operators for the raw flags enum. */ /* We require underlying type to be unsigned when using operator~ -- if it were not unsigned, undefined behavior could result. However, asserting this in the class itself would require too many unnecessary changes to usages of otherwise OK enum types. */ template , typename = gdb::Requires>> constexpr enum_type operator~ (enum_type e) { using underlying = typename enum_flags::underlying_type; /* Cast to ULONGEST first, to prevent integer promotions from enums with fixed underlying type std::uint8_t or std::uint16_t to signed int. This ensures we apply the bitwise complement on an unsigned type. */ return (enum_type)(underlying) ~ULONGEST (e); } template , typename = gdb::Requires>> constexpr void operator~ (enum_type e) = delete; template , typename = gdb::Requires>> constexpr enum_flags operator~ (enum_flags e) { using underlying = typename enum_flags::underlying_type; /* Cast to ULONGEST first, to prevent integer promotions from enums with fixed underlying type std::uint8_t or std::uint16_t to signed int. This ensures we apply the bitwise complement on an unsigned type. */ return (enum_type)(underlying) ~ULONGEST (e); } template , typename = gdb::Requires>> constexpr void operator~ (enum_flags e) = delete; /* Delete operator<< and operator>>. */ template > void operator<< (const enum_type &, const any_type &) = delete; template > void operator<< (const enum_flags &, const any_type &) = delete; template > void operator>> (const enum_type &, const any_type &) = delete; template > void operator>> (const enum_flags &, const any_type &) = delete; template template std::string enum_flags::to_string (const string_mapping (&mapping)[N]) const { enum_type flags = raw (); std::string res = hex_string (flags); res += " ["; bool need_space = false; for (const auto &entry : mapping) { if ((flags & entry.flag) != 0) { /* Work with an unsigned version of the underlying type, because if enum_type's underlying type is signed, op~ won't be defined for it, and, bitwise operations on signed types are implementation defined. */ using uns = typename std::make_unsigned::type; flags &= (enum_type) ~(uns) entry.flag; if (need_space) res += " "; res += entry.str; need_space = true; } } /* If there were flags not included in the mapping, print them as a hex number. */ if (flags != 0) { if (need_space) res += " "; res += hex_string (flags); } res += "]"; return res; } #endif /* GDBSUPPORT_ENUM_FLAGS_H */