Index: third_party/base/numerics/safe_conversions.h |
diff --git a/third_party/base/numerics/safe_conversions.h b/third_party/base/numerics/safe_conversions.h |
index dd0d1e47dc7aa8abf6f0af9e95a1e86e8e592feb..dc61d9c9ccab4c294a0b2a1fc04e38f7a90d7b82 100644 |
--- a/third_party/base/numerics/safe_conversions.h |
+++ b/third_party/base/numerics/safe_conversions.h |
@@ -2,65 +2,271 @@ |
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be |
// found in the LICENSE file. |
-#ifndef PDFIUM_THIRD_PARTY_BASE_SAFE_CONVERSIONS_H_ |
-#define PDFIUM_THIRD_PARTY_BASE_SAFE_CONVERSIONS_H_ |
+#ifndef PDFIUM_THIRD_PARTY_BASE_NUMERICS_SAFE_CONVERSIONS_H_ |
+#define PDFIUM_THIRD_PARTY_BASE_NUMERICS_SAFE_CONVERSIONS_H_ |
+ |
+#include <stddef.h> |
#include <limits> |
+#include <ostream> |
+#include <type_traits> |
-#include "safe_conversions_impl.h" |
-#include "third_party/base/logging.h" |
+#include "third_party/base/numerics/safe_conversions_impl.h" |
namespace pdfium { |
namespace base { |
+// The following are helper constexpr template functions and classes for safely |
+// performing a range of conversions, assignments, and tests: |
+// |
+// checked_cast<> - Analogous to static_cast<> for numeric types, except |
+// that it CHECKs that the specified numeric conversion will not overflow |
+// or underflow. NaN source will always trigger a CHECK. |
+// The default CHECK triggers a crash, but the handler can be overriden. |
+// saturated_cast<> - Analogous to static_cast<> for numeric types, except |
+// that it returns a saturated result when the specified numeric conversion |
+// would otherwise overflow or underflow. An NaN source returns 0 by |
+// default, but can be overridden to return a different result. |
+// strict_cast<> - Analogous to static_cast<> for numeric types, except that |
+// it will cause a compile failure if the destination type is not large |
+// enough to contain any value in the source type. It performs no runtime |
+// checking and thus introduces no runtime overhead. |
+// IsValueInRangeForNumericType<>() - A convenience function that returns true |
+// if the type supplied to the template parameter can represent the value |
+// passed as an argument to the function. |
+// IsValueNegative<>() - A convenience function that will accept any arithmetic |
+// type as an argument and will return whether the value is less than zero. |
+// Unsigned types always return false. |
+// SafeUnsignedAbs() - Returns the absolute value of the supplied integer |
+// parameter as an unsigned result (thus avoiding an overflow if the value |
+// is the signed, two's complement minimum). |
+// StrictNumeric<> - A wrapper type that performs assignments and copies via |
+// the strict_cast<> template, and can perform valid arithmetic comparisons |
+// across any range of arithmetic types. StrictNumeric is the return type |
+// for values extracted from a CheckedNumeric class instance. The raw |
+// arithmetic value is extracted via static_cast to the underlying type. |
+// MakeStrictNum() - Creates a new StrictNumeric from the underlying type of |
+// the supplied arithmetic or StrictNumeric type. |
+ |
// Convenience function that returns true if the supplied value is in range |
// for the destination type. |
template <typename Dst, typename Src> |
-inline bool IsValueInRangeForNumericType(Src value) { |
- return internal::DstRangeRelationToSrcRange<Dst>(value) == |
- internal::RANGE_VALID; |
+constexpr bool IsValueInRangeForNumericType(Src value) { |
+ return internal::DstRangeRelationToSrcRange<Dst>(value).IsValid(); |
} |
+// Forces a crash, like a CHECK(false). Used for numeric boundary errors. |
+struct CheckOnFailure { |
+ template <typename T> |
+ static T HandleFailure() { |
+#if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__) |
+ __builtin_trap(); |
+#else |
+ ((void)(*(volatile char*)0 = 0)); |
+#endif |
+ return T(); |
+ } |
+}; |
+ |
// checked_cast<> is analogous to static_cast<> for numeric types, |
// except that it CHECKs that the specified numeric conversion will not |
// overflow or underflow. NaN source will always trigger a CHECK. |
-template <typename Dst, typename Src> |
-inline Dst checked_cast(Src value) { |
- CHECK(IsValueInRangeForNumericType<Dst>(value)); |
- return static_cast<Dst>(value); |
+template <typename Dst, class CheckHandler = CheckOnFailure, typename Src> |
+constexpr Dst checked_cast(Src value) { |
+ // This throws a compile-time error on evaluating the constexpr if it can be |
+ // determined at compile-time as failing, otherwise it will CHECK at runtime. |
+ using SrcType = typename internal::UnderlyingType<Src>::type; |
+ return IsValueInRangeForNumericType<Dst, SrcType>(value) |
+ ? static_cast<Dst>(static_cast<SrcType>(value)) |
+ : CheckHandler::template HandleFailure<Dst>(); |
+} |
+ |
+// Default boundaries for integral/float: max/infinity, lowest/-infinity, 0/NaN. |
+template <typename T> |
+struct SaturationDefaultHandler { |
+ static constexpr T NaN() { |
+ return std::numeric_limits<T>::has_quiet_NaN |
+ ? std::numeric_limits<T>::quiet_NaN() |
+ : T(); |
+ } |
+ static constexpr T max() { return std::numeric_limits<T>::max(); } |
+ static constexpr T Overflow() { |
+ return std::numeric_limits<T>::has_infinity |
+ ? std::numeric_limits<T>::infinity() |
+ : std::numeric_limits<T>::max(); |
+ } |
+ static constexpr T lowest() { return std::numeric_limits<T>::lowest(); } |
+ static constexpr T Underflow() { |
+ return std::numeric_limits<T>::has_infinity |
+ ? std::numeric_limits<T>::infinity() * -1 |
+ : std::numeric_limits<T>::lowest(); |
+ } |
+}; |
+ |
+namespace internal { |
+ |
+template <typename Dst, template <typename> class S, typename Src> |
+constexpr Dst saturated_cast_impl(Src value, RangeCheck constraint) { |
+ // For some reason clang generates much better code when the branch is |
+ // structured exactly this way, rather than a sequence of checks. |
+ return !constraint.IsOverflowFlagSet() |
+ ? (!constraint.IsUnderflowFlagSet() ? static_cast<Dst>(value) |
+ : S<Dst>::Underflow()) |
+ // Skip this check for integral Src, which cannot be NaN. |
+ : (std::is_integral<Src>::value || !constraint.IsUnderflowFlagSet() |
+ ? S<Dst>::Overflow() |
+ : S<Dst>::NaN()); |
} |
// saturated_cast<> is analogous to static_cast<> for numeric types, except |
-// that the specified numeric conversion will saturate rather than overflow or |
-// underflow. NaN assignment to an integral will trigger a CHECK condition. |
+// that the specified numeric conversion will saturate by default rather than |
+// overflow or underflow, and NaN assignment to an integral will return 0. |
+// All boundary condition behaviors can be overriden with a custom handler. |
+template <typename Dst, |
+ template <typename> |
+ class SaturationHandler = SaturationDefaultHandler, |
+ typename Src> |
+constexpr Dst saturated_cast(Src value) { |
+ using SrcType = typename UnderlyingType<Src>::type; |
+ return saturated_cast_impl<Dst, SaturationHandler, SrcType>( |
+ value, |
+ DstRangeRelationToSrcRange<Dst, SaturationHandler, SrcType>(value)); |
+} |
+ |
+// strict_cast<> is analogous to static_cast<> for numeric types, except that |
+// it will cause a compile failure if the destination type is not large enough |
+// to contain any value in the source type. It performs no runtime checking. |
template <typename Dst, typename Src> |
-inline Dst saturated_cast(Src value) { |
- // Optimization for floating point values, which already saturate. |
- if (std::numeric_limits<Dst>::is_iec559) |
- return static_cast<Dst>(value); |
+constexpr Dst strict_cast(Src value) { |
+ using SrcType = typename UnderlyingType<Src>::type; |
+ static_assert(UnderlyingType<Src>::is_numeric, "Argument must be numeric."); |
+ static_assert(std::is_arithmetic<Dst>::value, "Result must be numeric."); |
- switch (internal::DstRangeRelationToSrcRange<Dst>(value)) { |
- case internal::RANGE_VALID: |
- return static_cast<Dst>(value); |
+ // If you got here from a compiler error, it's because you tried to assign |
+ // from a source type to a destination type that has insufficient range. |
+ // The solution may be to change the destination type you're assigning to, |
+ // and use one large enough to represent the source. |
+ // Alternatively, you may be better served with the checked_cast<> or |
+ // saturated_cast<> template functions for your particular use case. |
+ static_assert(StaticDstRangeRelationToSrcRange<Dst, SrcType>::value == |
+ NUMERIC_RANGE_CONTAINED, |
+ "The source type is out of range for the destination type. " |
+ "Please see strict_cast<> comments for more information."); |
- case internal::RANGE_UNDERFLOW: |
- return std::numeric_limits<Dst>::min(); |
+ return static_cast<Dst>(static_cast<SrcType>(value)); |
+} |
- case internal::RANGE_OVERFLOW: |
- return std::numeric_limits<Dst>::max(); |
+// Some wrappers to statically check that a type is in range. |
+template <typename Dst, typename Src, class Enable = void> |
+struct IsNumericRangeContained { |
+ static const bool value = false; |
+}; |
- // Should fail only on attempting to assign NaN to a saturated integer. |
- case internal::RANGE_INVALID: |
- CHECK(false); |
- return std::numeric_limits<Dst>::max(); |
+template <typename Dst, typename Src> |
+struct IsNumericRangeContained< |
+ Dst, |
+ Src, |
+ typename std::enable_if<ArithmeticOrUnderlyingEnum<Dst>::value && |
+ ArithmeticOrUnderlyingEnum<Src>::value>::type> { |
+ static const bool value = StaticDstRangeRelationToSrcRange<Dst, Src>::value == |
+ NUMERIC_RANGE_CONTAINED; |
+}; |
+ |
+// StrictNumeric implements compile time range checking between numeric types by |
+// wrapping assignment operations in a strict_cast. This class is intended to be |
+// used for function arguments and return types, to ensure the destination type |
+// can always contain the source type. This is essentially the same as enforcing |
+// -Wconversion in gcc and C4302 warnings on MSVC, but it can be applied |
+// incrementally at API boundaries, making it easier to convert code so that it |
+// compiles cleanly with truncation warnings enabled. |
+// This template should introduce no runtime overhead, but it also provides no |
+// runtime checking of any of the associated mathematical operations. Use |
+// CheckedNumeric for runtime range checks of the actual value being assigned. |
+template <typename T> |
+class StrictNumeric { |
+ public: |
+ using type = T; |
+ |
+ constexpr StrictNumeric() : value_(0) {} |
+ |
+ // Copy constructor. |
+ template <typename Src> |
+ constexpr StrictNumeric(const StrictNumeric<Src>& rhs) |
+ : value_(strict_cast<T>(rhs.value_)) {} |
+ |
+ // This is not an explicit constructor because we implicitly upgrade regular |
+ // numerics to StrictNumerics to make them easier to use. |
+ template <typename Src> |
+ constexpr StrictNumeric(Src value) // NOLINT(runtime/explicit) |
+ : value_(strict_cast<T>(value)) {} |
+ |
+ // If you got here from a compiler error, it's because you tried to assign |
+ // from a source type to a destination type that has insufficient range. |
+ // The solution may be to change the destination type you're assigning to, |
+ // and use one large enough to represent the source. |
+ // If you're assigning from a CheckedNumeric<> class, you may be able to use |
+ // the AssignIfValid() member function, specify a narrower destination type to |
+ // the member value functions (e.g. val.template ValueOrDie<Dst>()), use one |
+ // of the value helper functions (e.g. ValueOrDieForType<Dst>(val)). |
+ // If you've encountered an _ambiguous overload_ you can use a static_cast<> |
+ // to explicitly cast the result to the destination type. |
+ // If none of that works, you may be better served with the checked_cast<> or |
+ // saturated_cast<> template functions for your particular use case. |
+ template <typename Dst, |
+ typename std::enable_if< |
+ IsNumericRangeContained<Dst, T>::value>::type* = nullptr> |
+ constexpr operator Dst() const { |
+ return static_cast<typename ArithmeticOrUnderlyingEnum<Dst>::type>(value_); |
} |
- NOTREACHED(); |
- return static_cast<Dst>(value); |
+ private: |
+ const T value_; |
+}; |
+ |
+// Convience wrapper returns a StrictNumeric from the provided arithmetic type. |
+template <typename T> |
+constexpr StrictNumeric<typename UnderlyingType<T>::type> MakeStrictNum( |
+ const T value) { |
+ return value; |
+} |
+ |
+// Overload the ostream output operator to make logging work nicely. |
+template <typename T> |
+std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& os, const StrictNumeric<T>& value) { |
+ os << static_cast<T>(value); |
+ return os; |
} |
+#define STRICT_COMPARISON_OP(NAME, OP) \ |
+ template <typename L, typename R, \ |
+ typename std::enable_if< \ |
+ internal::IsStrictOp<L, R>::value>::type* = nullptr> \ |
+ constexpr bool operator OP(const L lhs, const R rhs) { \ |
+ return SafeCompare<NAME, typename UnderlyingType<L>::type, \ |
+ typename UnderlyingType<R>::type>(lhs, rhs); \ |
+ } |
+ |
+STRICT_COMPARISON_OP(IsLess, <); |
+STRICT_COMPARISON_OP(IsLessOrEqual, <=); |
+STRICT_COMPARISON_OP(IsGreater, >); |
+STRICT_COMPARISON_OP(IsGreaterOrEqual, >=); |
+STRICT_COMPARISON_OP(IsEqual, ==); |
+STRICT_COMPARISON_OP(IsNotEqual, !=); |
+ |
+#undef STRICT_COMPARISON_OP |
+}; |
+ |
+using internal::strict_cast; |
+using internal::saturated_cast; |
+using internal::SafeUnsignedAbs; |
+using internal::StrictNumeric; |
+using internal::MakeStrictNum; |
+using internal::IsValueNegative; |
+ |
+// Explicitly make a shorter size_t alias for convenience. |
+using SizeT = StrictNumeric<size_t>; |
+ |
} // namespace base |
} // namespace pdfium |
-#endif // PDFIUM_THIRD_PARTY_BASE_SAFE_CONVERSIONS_H_ |
- |
+#endif // PDFIUM_THIRD_PARTY_BASE_NUMERICS_SAFE_CONVERSIONS_H_ |