//! Template declaration and instantiation related things. //! //! The nomenclature surrounding templates is often confusing, so here are a few //! brief definitions: //! //! * "Template definition": a class/struct/alias/function definition that takes //! generic template parameters. For example: //! //! ```c++ //! template //! class List { //! // ... //! }; //! ``` //! //! * "Template instantiation": an instantiation is a use of a template with //! concrete template arguments. For example, `List`. //! //! * "Template specialization": an alternative template definition providing a //! custom definition for instantiations with the matching template //! arguments. This C++ feature is unsupported by bindgen. For example: //! //! ```c++ //! template<> //! class List { //! // Special layout for int lists... //! }; //! ``` use super::context::{BindgenContext, ItemId, TypeId}; use super::item::{IsOpaque, Item, ItemAncestors}; use super::traversal::{EdgeKind, Trace, Tracer}; use crate::clang; /// Template declaration (and such declaration's template parameters) related /// methods. /// /// This trait's methods distinguish between `None` and `Some([])` for /// declarations that are not templates and template declarations with zero /// parameters, in general. /// /// Consider this example: /// /// ```c++ /// template /// class Foo { /// T use_of_t; /// U use_of_u; /// /// template /// using Bar = V*; /// /// class Inner { /// T x; /// U y; /// Bar z; /// }; /// /// template /// class Lol { /// // No use of W, but here's a use of T. /// T t; /// }; /// /// template /// class Wtf { /// // X is not used because W is not used. /// Lol lololol; /// }; /// }; /// /// class Qux { /// int y; /// }; /// ``` /// /// The following table depicts the results of each trait method when invoked on /// each of the declarations above: /// /// +------+----------------------+--------------------------+------------------------+---- /// |Decl. | self_template_params | num_self_template_params | all_template_parameters| ... /// +------+----------------------+--------------------------+------------------------+---- /// |Foo | [T, U] | 2 | [T, U] | ... /// |Bar | [V] | 1 | [T, U, V] | ... /// |Inner | [] | 0 | [T, U] | ... /// |Lol | [W] | 1 | [T, U, W] | ... /// |Wtf | [X] | 1 | [T, U, X] | ... /// |Qux | [] | 0 | [] | ... /// +------+----------------------+--------------------------+------------------------+---- /// /// ----+------+-----+----------------------+ /// ... |Decl. | ... | used_template_params | /// ----+------+-----+----------------------+ /// ... |Foo | ... | [T, U] | /// ... |Bar | ... | [V] | /// ... |Inner | ... | [] | /// ... |Lol | ... | [T] | /// ... |Wtf | ... | [T] | /// ... |Qux | ... | [] | /// ----+------+-----+----------------------+ pub trait TemplateParameters: Sized { /// Get the set of `ItemId`s that make up this template declaration's free /// template parameters. /// /// Note that these might *not* all be named types: C++ allows /// constant-value template parameters as well as template-template /// parameters. Of course, Rust does not allow generic parameters to be /// anything but types, so we must treat them as opaque, and avoid /// instantiating them. fn self_template_params(&self, ctx: &BindgenContext) -> Vec; /// Get the number of free template parameters this template declaration /// has. fn num_self_template_params(&self, ctx: &BindgenContext) -> usize { self.self_template_params(ctx).len() } /// Get the complete set of template parameters that can affect this /// declaration. /// /// Note that this item doesn't need to be a template declaration itself for /// `Some` to be returned here (in contrast to `self_template_params`). If /// this item is a member of a template declaration, then the parent's /// template parameters are included here. /// /// In the example above, `Inner` depends on both of the `T` and `U` type /// parameters, even though it is not itself a template declaration and /// therefore has no type parameters itself. Perhaps it helps to think about /// how we would fully reference such a member type in C++: /// `Foo::Inner`. `Foo` *must* be instantiated with template /// arguments before we can gain access to the `Inner` member type. fn all_template_params(&self, ctx: &BindgenContext) -> Vec where Self: ItemAncestors, { let mut ancestors: Vec<_> = self.ancestors(ctx).collect(); ancestors.reverse(); ancestors .into_iter() .flat_map(|id| id.self_template_params(ctx).into_iter()) .collect() } /// Get only the set of template parameters that this item uses. This is a /// subset of `all_template_params` and does not necessarily contain any of /// `self_template_params`. fn used_template_params(&self, ctx: &BindgenContext) -> Vec where Self: AsRef, { assert!( ctx.in_codegen_phase(), "template parameter usage is not computed until codegen" ); let id = *self.as_ref(); ctx.resolve_item(id) .all_template_params(ctx) .into_iter() .filter(|p| ctx.uses_template_parameter(id, *p)) .collect() } } /// A trait for things which may or may not be a named template type parameter. pub trait AsTemplateParam { /// Any extra information the implementor might need to make this decision. type Extra; /// Convert this thing to the item id of a named template type parameter. fn as_template_param( &self, ctx: &BindgenContext, extra: &Self::Extra, ) -> Option; /// Is this a named template type parameter? fn is_template_param( &self, ctx: &BindgenContext, extra: &Self::Extra, ) -> bool { self.as_template_param(ctx, extra).is_some() } } /// A concrete instantiation of a generic template. #[derive(Clone, Debug)] pub struct TemplateInstantiation { /// The template definition which this is instantiating. definition: TypeId, /// The concrete template arguments, which will be substituted in the /// definition for the generic template parameters. args: Vec, } impl TemplateInstantiation { /// Construct a new template instantiation from the given parts. pub fn new(definition: TypeId, args: I) -> TemplateInstantiation where I: IntoIterator, { TemplateInstantiation { definition, args: args.into_iter().collect(), } } /// Get the template definition for this instantiation. pub fn template_definition(&self) -> TypeId { self.definition } /// Get the concrete template arguments used in this instantiation. pub fn template_arguments(&self) -> &[TypeId] { &self.args[..] } /// Parse a `TemplateInstantiation` from a clang `Type`. pub fn from_ty( ty: &clang::Type, ctx: &mut BindgenContext, ) -> Option { use clang_sys::*; let template_args = ty.template_args().map_or(vec![], |args| match ty .canonical_type() .template_args() { Some(canonical_args) => { let arg_count = args.len(); args.chain(canonical_args.skip(arg_count)) .filter(|t| t.kind() != CXType_Invalid) .map(|t| { Item::from_ty_or_ref(t, t.declaration(), None, ctx) }) .collect() } None => args .filter(|t| t.kind() != CXType_Invalid) .map(|t| Item::from_ty_or_ref(t, t.declaration(), None, ctx)) .collect(), }); let declaration = ty.declaration(); let definition = if declaration.kind() == CXCursor_TypeAliasTemplateDecl { Some(declaration) } else { declaration.specialized().or_else(|| { let mut template_ref = None; ty.declaration().visit(|child| { if child.kind() == CXCursor_TemplateRef { template_ref = Some(child); return CXVisit_Break; } // Instantiations of template aliases might have the // TemplateRef to the template alias definition arbitrarily // deep, so we need to recurse here and not only visit // direct children. CXChildVisit_Recurse }); template_ref.and_then(|cur| cur.referenced()) }) }; let definition = match definition { Some(def) => def, None => { if !ty.declaration().is_builtin() { warn!( "Could not find template definition for template \ instantiation" ); } return None; } }; let template_definition = Item::from_ty_or_ref(definition.cur_type(), definition, None, ctx); Some(TemplateInstantiation::new( template_definition, template_args, )) } } impl IsOpaque for TemplateInstantiation { type Extra = Item; /// Is this an opaque template instantiation? fn is_opaque(&self, ctx: &BindgenContext, item: &Item) -> bool { if self.template_definition().is_opaque(ctx, &()) { return true; } // TODO(#774): This doesn't properly handle opaque instantiations where // an argument is itself an instantiation because `canonical_name` does // not insert the template arguments into the name, ie it for nested // template arguments it creates "Foo" instead of "Foo". The fully // correct fix is to make `canonical_{name,path}` include template // arguments properly. let mut path = item.path_for_allowlisting(ctx).clone(); let args: Vec<_> = self .template_arguments() .iter() .map(|arg| { let arg_path = ctx.resolve_item(*arg).path_for_allowlisting(ctx); arg_path[1..].join("::") }) .collect(); { let last = path.last_mut().unwrap(); last.push('<'); last.push_str(&args.join(", ")); last.push('>'); } ctx.opaque_by_name(&path) } } impl Trace for TemplateInstantiation { type Extra = (); fn trace(&self, _ctx: &BindgenContext, tracer: &mut T, _: &()) where T: Tracer, { tracer .visit_kind(self.definition.into(), EdgeKind::TemplateDeclaration); for arg in self.template_arguments() { tracer.visit_kind(arg.into(), EdgeKind::TemplateArgument); } } }