If you will have the same header in both libraries you may have some
tricky failures.
And there is at least one header that exists in both: stdatomic.h
Right now there is a workaround for this header, that allows to use C++
version of this header for C - the workaround is called "set
_LIBCPP_COMPILER_CLANG_BASED not only for CXX" [1] and use include_next
[2].
[1]: 9a457ab3c6/include/__config (L39)
[2]: 9a457ab3c6/include/stdatomic.h (L223-L231)
However #42730 changes this, and now it fails to compile because of this.
Signed-off-by: Azat Khuzhin <a.khuzhin@semrush.com>
Before, if you store clickhouse sources in /src, there was a typo and it
produce the following error:
CMake Error in contrib/libcxx-cmake/CMakeLists.txt:
Target "cxx" INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES property contains path:
"/src"
which is prefixed in the source directory.
Also move "src" into PRIVATE, since it is required only for libcxx
itself.
Signed-off-by: Azat Khuzhin <a.khuzhin@semrush.com>
- TSA is a static analyzer build by Google which finds race conditions
and deadlocks at compile time.
- It works by associating a shared member variable with a
synchronization primitive that protects it. The compiler can then
check at each access if proper locking happened before. A good
introduction are [0] and [1].
- TSA requires some help by the programmer via annotations. Luckily,
LLVM's libcxx already has annotations for std::mutex, std::lock_guard,
std::shared_mutex and std::scoped_lock. This commit enables them
(--> contrib/libcxx-cmake/CMakeLists.txt).
- Further, this commit adds convenience macros for the low-level
annotations for use in ClickHouse (--> base/defines.h). For
demonstration, they are leveraged in a few places.
- As we compile with "-Wall -Wextra -Weverything", the required compiler
flag "-Wthread-safety-analysis" was already enabled. Negative checks
are an experimental feature of TSA and disabled
(--> cmake/warnings.cmake). Compile times did not increase noticeably.
- TSA is used in a few places with simple locking. I tried TSA also
where locking is more complex. The problem was usually that it is
unclear which data is protected by which lock :-(. But there was
definitely some weird code where locking looked broken. So there is
some potential to find bugs.
*** Limitations of TSA besides the ones listed in [1]:
- The programmer needs to know which lock protects which piece of shared
data. This is not always easy for large classes.
- Two synchronization primitives used in ClickHouse are not annotated in
libcxx:
(1) std::unique_lock: A releaseable lock handle often together with
std::condition_variable, e.g. in solve producer-consumer problems.
(2) std::recursive_mutex: A re-entrant mutex variant. Its usage can be
considered a design flaw + typically it is slower than a standard
mutex. In this commit, one std::recursive_mutex was converted to
std::mutex and annotated with TSA.
- For free-standing functions (e.g. helper functions) which are passed
shared data members, it can be tricky to specify the associated lock.
This is because the annotations use the normal C++ rules for symbol
resolution.
[0] https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ThreadSafetyAnalysis.html
[1] https://static.googleusercontent.com/media/research.google.com/en//pubs/archive/42958.pdf
* libcxxabi uses exception handling library as public
* Don't set -stdlib for internal libc++ - it poisons the checks.
* Enable capnproto in unbundled build back
* Fix shared build
* Major default libs refactor
* Fix build with gcc_eh
* Link all libraries as a big group.
* Use global interface library as a group
* Build capnproto using our cmake
* Use only internal libunwind