- 14 Aug, 2018 11 commits
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Gareth Chen authored
Summary: Adding an implementation of X509_get0_tbs_sigalg for pre-1.1.0 versions of OpenSSL Reviewed By: fredemmott Differential Revision: D9317612 fbshipit-source-id: b7d270a818f802d7df537cdb23e2129dfb184567
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Marshall Cline authored
Summary: This is part of "the great r-valuification of folly::Future": * This is something we should do for safety in general. * Several of folly::Future's methods are lvalue-qualified even though they act as though they are rvalue-qualified, that is, they provide a postcondition that says, in effect, callers should act as though the method invalidated its `this` object (regardless of whether that invalidation was actual or logical). * This violates the C++ principle to "Express ideas directly in code" (see Core Guidelines), and generally makes it more confusing for callers as well as hiding the actual semantics from tools (linters, compilers, etc.). * This dichotomy and confusion has manifested itself by some failures around D7840699 since lvalue-qualification hides that operation's move-out semantics - leads to some use of future operations that are really not correct, but are not obviously incorrect. * The goal of rvalueification is to make sure methods that are logically rvalue-qualified are actually rvalue-qualified, which forces callsites to acknowledge that rvalueification, e.g., `std::move(f).unit()` instead of `f.unit()`. This syntactic change in the callsites forces callers to acknowledge the method's rvalue semantics. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9308405 fbshipit-source-id: 3ae0001deef1aef203454112757f8f64c47831fc
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Marshall Cline authored
Summary: This is part of "the great r-valuification of folly::Future": * This is something we should do for safety in general. * Several of folly::Future's methods are lvalue-qualified even though they act as though they are rvalue-qualified, that is, they provide a postcondition that says, in effect, callers should act as though the method invalidated its `this` object (regardless of whether that invalidation was actual or logical). * This violates the C++ principle to "Express ideas directly in code" (see Core Guidelines), and generally makes it more confusing for callers as well as hiding the actual semantics from tools (linters, compilers, etc.). * This dichotomy and confusion has manifested itself by some failures around D7840699 since lvalue-qualification hides that operation's move-out semantics - leads to some use of future operations that are really not correct, but are not obviously incorrect. * The goal of rvalueification is to make sure methods that are logically rvalue-qualified are actually rvalue-qualified, which forces callsites to acknowledge that rvalueification, e.g., `std::move(f).filter(...)` instead of `f.filter(...)`. This syntactic change in the callsites forces callers to acknowledge the method's rvalue semantics. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9308741 fbshipit-source-id: 671b1b7a39f16bcc20ad9f584ed0ca8def53d21c
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Marshall Cline authored
Summary: This is part of "the great r-valuification of folly::Future": * This is something we should do for safety in general. * Several of folly::Future's methods are lvalue-qualified even though they act as though they are rvalue-qualified, that is, they provide a postcondition that says, in effect, callers should act as though the method invalidated its `this` object (regardless of whether that invalidation was actual or logical). * This violates the C++ principle to "Express ideas directly in code" (see Core Guidelines), and generally makes it more confusing for callers as well as hiding the actual semantics from tools (linters, compilers, etc.). * This dichotomy and confusion has manifested itself by some failures around D7840699 since lvalue-qualification hides that operation's move-out semantics - leads to some use of future operations that are really not correct, but are not obviously incorrect. * The goal of rvalueification is to make sure methods that are logically rvalue-qualified are actually rvalue-qualified, which forces callsites to acknowledge that rvalueification, e.g., `std::move(f).ensure(...)` instead of `f.ensure(...)`. This syntactic change in the callsites forces callers to acknowledge the method's rvalue semantics. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9309465 fbshipit-source-id: dd3bcf753aa54d3c6da647b828c35a436abffecc
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Marshall Cline authored
Summary: This is part of "the great r-valuification of folly::Future": * This is something we should do for safety in general. * Several of folly::Future's methods are lvalue-qualified even though they act as though they are rvalue-qualified, that is, they provide a postcondition that says, in effect, callers should act as though the method invalidated its `this` object (regardless of whether that invalidation was actual or logical). * This violates the C++ principle to "Express ideas directly in code" (see Core Guidelines), and generally makes it more confusing for callers as well as hiding the actual semantics from tools (linters, compilers, etc.). * This dichotomy and confusion has manifested itself by some failures around D7840699 since lvalue-qualification hides that operation's move-out semantics - leads to some use of future operations that are really not correct, but are not obviously incorrect. * The goal of rvalueification is to make sure methods that are logically rvalue-qualified are actually rvalue-qualified, which forces callsites to acknowledge that rvalueification, e.g., `std::move(f).reduce(...)` instead of `f.reduce(...)`. This syntactic change in the callsites forces callers to acknowledge the method's rvalue semantics. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9309840 fbshipit-source-id: 7dbb26dc5e5c7a04720c1fb903e33dfa799e8713
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Marshall Cline authored
Summary: This is part of "the great r-valuification of folly::Future": * This is something we should do for safety in general. * Several of folly::Future's methods are lvalue-qualified even though they act as though they are rvalue-qualified, that is, they provide a postcondition that says, in effect, callers should act as though the method invalidated its `this` object (regardless of whether that invalidation was actual or logical). * This violates the C++ principle to "Express ideas directly in code" (see Core Guidelines), and generally makes it more confusing for callers as well as hiding the actual semantics from tools (linters, compilers, etc.). * This dichotomy and confusion has manifested itself by some failures around D7840699 since lvalue-qualification hides that operation's move-out semantics - leads to some use of future operations that are really not correct, but are not obviously incorrect. * The goal of rvalueification is to make sure methods that are logically rvalue-qualified are actually rvalue-qualified, which forces callsites to acknowledge that rvalueification, e.g., `std::move(f).unwrap(...)` instead of `f.unwrap(...)`. This syntactic change in the callsites forces callers to acknowledge the method's rvalue semantics. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9309748 fbshipit-source-id: eeda770f9e0d3462e1d4680e45d68c8355156b0c
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Lee Howes authored
Summary: Overall plan to modify Future<T>::then to be r-value qualified and use Future<T>::thenTry or Future<T>::thenValue. The goal is to disambiguate folly::Future and to improve type and lifetime safety of Future and its methods. Diff to remove the l-value qualified version of folly::Future::then. Post on the topic of improving safety of Future: https://fb.facebook.com/groups/fbcode/permalink/1726007767436055/ Reviewed By: marshallcline Differential Revision: D9175988 fbshipit-source-id: 942ae3e1548e8538497eaa0cbde68829c3145d1d
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Neel Goyal authored
Summary: Add utility to IOBuf to wrap iovecs and have WriteChainAsyncTransportWrapper use this. In the future, custom transports could use this method specialized handling of writev without subclassing WriteChainAsyncTransportWrapper. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9297258 fbshipit-source-id: 9afc17f2ac2c46a49ce384e7c4d8c3a82afa1eec
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Terence Feng authored
Summary: lvalue-qualified then() has been deprecated lvalue-qualified get() has been deleted Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/folly/pull/911 Reviewed By: LeeHowes Differential Revision: D9310836 Pulled By: yfeldblum fbshipit-source-id: 662596bf5985f7ceabb2a23725d51f8e05407340
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Orvid King authored
Summary: As per: https://github.com/facebook/folly/commit/ffbc96640b6db68a8e1b020b1048ab45b0699b23#commitcomment-30059248 Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9306902 fbshipit-source-id: 79eca471bf911c6791425432f537c6f2e7f99f49
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Oleksiy Ivanov authored
Summary: In some cases OPENSSL_IS_BORINGSSL can be defined as simple as: or in copts: -DOPENSSL_IS_BORINGSSL this causing folly to fail compilation. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/folly/pull/909 Reviewed By: ngoyal Differential Revision: D9308739 Pulled By: yfeldblum fbshipit-source-id: 2ce6170cd97b75ad2322ac57b45824202fe34f21
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- 13 Aug, 2018 5 commits
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Lewis Baker authored
Summary: Adds an async Mutex that allows a coroutine to `co_await` acquiring the lock on a mutex. This mutex is not cancellable and does not support timeouts, but is very efficient and does not require any per-operation memory allocations (memory for tracking the list of waiting coroutines is borrowed from the awaiting coroutine frame). The Mutex class provides fair locking by implementing a FIFO queue of waiting coroutines. ie. coroutines will acquire the lock in the order that they await the lock operation. This could be relaxed in the future if needed to provide bounded wait-times but not necessarily FIFO order. Example usage: ```c++ template<typename T> class ConcurrentStack { folly::coro::Mutex mutex_; std::vector<T> values_; public: coro::Task<void> pushAsync(T value) { auto lock = co_await mutex_.scopedLockAsync(); values_.push_back(value); } coro::Task<Optional<T>> tryPopAsync() { auto lock = co_await mutex_.scopedLockAsync(); if (values_.empty()) co_return Optional<T>{}; T result = values_.back(); values_.pop_back(); co_return result; } }; ``` Reviewed By: andriigrynenko Differential Revision: D9209637 fbshipit-source-id: 4b81c8f33b9fc39781f4237d1821b0e0b2e4f3c5
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Asier Gutierrez authored
Summary: Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/folly/pull/910 Reviewed By: simpkins Differential Revision: D9300288 Pulled By: yfeldblum fbshipit-source-id: 5724bcc2e9c6602a0e99c436b62893926281e673
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Lewis Baker authored
Summary: Adds a fundamental thread-synchronisation primitive for coroutines that allows one or more coroutines to suspend execution until some thread signals them. This differs from the folly::fibers::Baton implementation in that it does not expose a blocking wait API, only an asynchronous wait API that must be waited-on from within a coroutine. This implementation also permits multiple coroutines concurrently waiting on the baton. Example usage: ```c++ folly::coro::Baton baton; std::string sharedValue; folly::coro::Task<void> consumer() { // Wait until the baton is posted. co_await baton.waitAsync(); // Now safe to read shared state. std::cout << sharedValue << std::cout; } void producer() { // Write to shared state sharedValue = "some result"; // Publish the value by 'posting' the baton. // This will resume the consumer if it was currently suspended. baton.post(); } ``` Reviewed By: andriigrynenko Differential Revision: D9208955 fbshipit-source-id: 07aa372b4c6b90dc0565763add716e591d312c65
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Dan Zimmerman authored
Summary: We try to detect if you're building for a darwin version where clock_gettime doesn't have a library definition and provide our own if that's the case. However, if you build for an earlier darwin verion but then run on a newer darwin version where clock_gettime does have a definition our symbol still overrides that one, when I think it shouldn't (I'd rather use the library definition whenever possible). This is one of the exact situations why weak linkage exists (I guess at least on darwin since that's the only place I have knowledge), so let's use it here: provide our own definition if a library one doesn't exist, otherwise the strong library definition will override ours. This creates the following issue now: previous to this diff you would have a unified API (though divergent from the system one on darwin) across all versions of darwin when linking in this library. Now when running on a newer version of darwin the semantics of each clock type may change (in fact I know CLOCK_MONOTONIC diverges). Look for a follow up diff to try and patch up divergence. Reviewed By: mzlee, Orvid Differential Revision: D8781475 fbshipit-source-id: e80e9d309115b64563511935ef074c4f46da025b
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Gennady Zlobin authored
Summary: Successfully built on Fedora, added a comment that it will work on Fedora up to 28 Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9147146 fbshipit-source-id: a768eee4becadcb017547d96207d63d43ec2be57
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- 11 Aug, 2018 8 commits
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Yedidya Feldblum authored
Summary: [Folly] Replace `FOLLY_HAVE_FEATURES_H` with `__has_include`. Now that folly only targets which support `__has_include`. Reviewed By: simpkins Differential Revision: D9281991 fbshipit-source-id: 2e263681df5a980220fc133e8ac0495f229f6084
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Yedidya Feldblum authored
Summary: [Folly] Replace `FOLLY_HAVE_MALLOC_H` with `__has_include`. Now that folly only targets which support `__has_include`. Reviewed By: Orvid Differential Revision: D9281875 fbshipit-source-id: eb895f3e034e4a4d3c9eb34fb73d47893e59f5ef
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Yedidya Feldblum authored
Summary: [Folly] Replace `FOLLY_HAVE_LIBDWARF_DWARF_H` with `__has_include`. Now that folly only targets which support `__has_include`. Reviewed By: Orvid Differential Revision: D9281453 fbshipit-source-id: f416a6e4eb25ec31f86c705b7e9aafb1064e876a
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Yedidya Feldblum authored
Summary: [Folly] Replace `FOLLY_HAVE_BITS_CXXCONFIG_H` with `__has_include`. Now that folly only targets which support `__has_include`. Reviewed By: Orvid Differential Revision: D9280942 fbshipit-source-id: cd843b4e903b2c96d3a40611f2274572b8b0600a
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Yedidya Feldblum authored
Summary: [Folly] Replace `FOLLY_HAVE_LINUX_MEMBARRIER_H` with `__has_include`. Now that folly only targets which support `__has_include`. Reviewed By: Orvid Differential Revision: D9279852 fbshipit-source-id: 94c446a2d6e2662d32a7899ab470679da6da8e0e
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Victor Zverovich authored
Summary: This fixes various include and dependency issues found when building `folly/compression/test/facebook:compression_fuzz_test.so` with modules. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9271280 fbshipit-source-id: e0ae46c2a6d95c8f4d0a66e3dc20e1d045ffc6a4
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Matthieu Martin authored
Summary: This reverts my previous change "RequestContext: replace F14FastMap by std::unordred_map" Reviewed By: ot Differential Revision: D9280469 fbshipit-source-id: ad3f4d5f520e88ab0e0fab0506d87bab2cd10d41
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Yedidya Feldblum authored
Summary: [Folly] Epochs for `BufferedRandomDevice`. To maintain the security property that the thread-local object is reset after fork in the child process, but in an async-signal-safe way. This approach has the downside that it makes the fast path larger by 3 instruction (`mov`, `cmp`, `jne`). Reviewed By: djwatson, ot Differential Revision: D9256536 fbshipit-source-id: dc34e1aeb75e1009610d47fe4ef7030a4a0e2a90
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- 10 Aug, 2018 11 commits
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Yin Qiu authored
Summary: The following code won't compile with g++ 8.2 when `-Wall -Werror` is turned on (`-Werror=class-memaccess` implied): std::memcpy(dst, src, n * sizeof(Value)) where in `VectorContainerPolicy`'s case, `Value` is typically an `std::pair`, which indeed has no trivial copy-assignment. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/folly/pull/907 Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9244951 Pulled By: Orvid fbshipit-source-id: 26787d43dab7d4212c5975a509dfd8703b0a157c
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Lee Howes authored
Summary: Overall plan to modify Future<T>::then to be r-value qualified and use Future<T>::thenTry or Future<T>::thenValue. The goal is to disambiguate folly::Future and to improve type and lifetime safety of Future and its methods. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9273440 fbshipit-source-id: f1e1b91fd8fe02020a5919b9193644e256413982
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Yedidya Feldblum authored
Summary: [Folly] Cut `FOLLY_HAS_INCLUDE` now that all supported platforms have it. MSVC2015 and gcc4.9.1 don't support it, but folly no longer targets them. Reviewed By: simpkins, Orvid Differential Revision: D9262258 fbshipit-source-id: e518492acd7c11374ab971b26adb642bce7b19c3
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Victor Zverovich authored
Summary: Fix various dependency issues in folly for modular build. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9246772 fbshipit-source-id: 32afa48db3222b906077376c54e1301c8366d97d
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Ajanthan Asogamoorthy authored
Summary: Move Password in file from wangle to folly Reviewed By: ngoyal, yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9192652 fbshipit-source-id: b883ddaf2d815b37677d9c5e924b3dd06aa0ec6b
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Victor Zverovich authored
Summary: Move the definition of `HAZPTR_DEBUG` from code to the target to fix modular build. This is needed because `HAZPTR_DEBUG` is effectively a configuration macro affecting the API. Reviewed By: magedm Differential Revision: D9256127 fbshipit-source-id: 44deb0e915373ea88206098544b03fa335b31a22
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Nathan Bronson authored
Summary: F14 varies its inline code according to the flags passed to the compiler. This can cause problems if libraries override compilation flags on their own, since it won't be safe to exchange F14 instances between compilation domains. This diff introduces a template specialization that varies according to the intrinsics mode and that has only a single definition (in F14Table.cpp). The member is called on a couple of cold paths (exception handling for copy construction and rehash). This makes it very likely that a compilation unit that uses F14 and is compiled with different compiler flags than F14Table.cpp will get a linker error. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9200315 fbshipit-source-id: 9cbca18eef0ddd6efcf6d9d6057eda2400f8653c
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Andrew Gallagher authored
Summary: As indicated at https://github.com/krb5/krb5/blob/master/src/include/krb5.h, this header is deprecated, so update to use the new location (and fix lint). Reviewed By: luciang Differential Revision: D9259770 fbshipit-source-id: 6832206b8c890184f5d3369b0305048ae9c377d9
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Tingzhe Zhou authored
Summary: Make the file name consistent with its class name Add benchmark code Attach performance data Reviewed By: magedm Differential Revision: D9250954 fbshipit-source-id: b9f9b90cb83ca319d91fe65667d0072511be5e26
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Adam Simpkins authored
Summary: Update the CMake build files to install a libfolly.pc file so downstream projects can use pkg-config to more easily depend on folly. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9213429 fbshipit-source-id: 849c0fce01d4903d3f8a7b6d196037bf950e5921
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Adam Simpkins authored
Summary: folly, and therefore most of our other open source projects, no longer support gcc-4.9. Drop Ubuntu 14.04 and Debian 8.6 from our CI platforms list, since the these images only support gcc 4.9. We should ideally add support for Ubuntu 18.04 soon, but I'll leave that for a later diff. Removing the older platforms is somewhat higher priority for now to get our Travis CI builds green again. Reviewed By: snarkmaster Differential Revision: D9258797 fbshipit-source-id: 3cab47a6c51b2dbe63214034240f844c85963c3d
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- 09 Aug, 2018 5 commits
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Dave Watson authored
Summary: Fork test tries to test that we don't reuse the SecureRandom buffer on fork, but it only tests one byte. This gives us probability one in 256*256 (or something like that) that we spuriously fail. Check the whole buffer instead before failing. Reviewed By: fredemmott Differential Revision: D9242788 fbshipit-source-id: b9fb809518797c439d7fe16084a04f9964a1f597
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Adam Simpkins authored
Summary: experimental/symbolizer/ElfUtil.cpp was deleted in D9218592 so it no longer needs to be explicitly excluded in CMakeLists.txt Reviewed By: Orvid, calebmarchent Differential Revision: D9229945 fbshipit-source-id: 7d708b265573e70e4e6de88edefa2fa5b41af200
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Adam Simpkins authored
Summary: The code in folly/experimental/symbolizer/* is already included in the main libfolly library if it is supported by the build configuration. Remove the separate libfolly_symbolizer target added in D9216312 that includes a second copy of these objects. This change effectively reverts D9216312. Reviewed By: Orvid, calebmarchent Differential Revision: D9229946 fbshipit-source-id: d8e6874eeab8c9c1aa519441bd29ae107aef03ac
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Orvid King authored
Summary: Previously it was only capable of handling 512 byte strings under MSVC due to the constexpr recursion depth limit being 512 by default under MSVC. In the future once we have C++14 constexpr everywhere, this should just be a for loop, which should remove the limit. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9230717 fbshipit-source-id: 88bcf0ef94b200301eb41392482e910b2e8de008
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Lee Howes authored
Summary: Separates l-value and r-value versions of parameterless then. Deprecates l-value version. Reviewed By: yfeldblum Differential Revision: D9222345 fbshipit-source-id: 3dd95b3e35bf1b06d426334c30150b049a5e0b70
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