Index: base/string16.h |
diff --git a/base/string16.h b/base/string16.h |
index f7a35d0a90282d770862720dc36f72203bf03c41..4fea704747f474f94a1bcc041b995017008fad4d 100644 |
--- a/base/string16.h |
+++ b/base/string16.h |
@@ -1,189 +1,7 @@ |
-// Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. |
+// Copyright (c) 2013 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. |
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be |
// found in the LICENSE file. |
-#ifndef BASE_STRING16_H_ |
-#define BASE_STRING16_H_ |
- |
-// WHAT: |
-// A version of std::basic_string that provides 2-byte characters even when |
-// wchar_t is not implemented as a 2-byte type. You can access this class as |
-// string16. We also define char16, which string16 is based upon. |
-// |
-// WHY: |
-// On Windows, wchar_t is 2 bytes, and it can conveniently handle UTF-16/UCS-2 |
-// data. Plenty of existing code operates on strings encoded as UTF-16. |
-// |
-// On many other platforms, sizeof(wchar_t) is 4 bytes by default. We can make |
-// it 2 bytes by using the GCC flag -fshort-wchar. But then std::wstring fails |
-// at run time, because it calls some functions (like wcslen) that come from |
-// the system's native C library -- which was built with a 4-byte wchar_t! |
-// It's wasteful to use 4-byte wchar_t strings to carry UTF-16 data, and it's |
-// entirely improper on those systems where the encoding of wchar_t is defined |
-// as UTF-32. |
-// |
-// Here, we define string16, which is similar to std::wstring but replaces all |
-// libc functions with custom, 2-byte-char compatible routines. It is capable |
-// of carrying UTF-16-encoded data. |
- |
-#include <stdio.h> |
-#include <string> |
- |
-#include "base/base_export.h" |
-#include "base/basictypes.h" |
- |
-#if defined(WCHAR_T_IS_UTF16) |
- |
-namespace base { |
- |
-typedef wchar_t char16; |
-typedef std::wstring string16; |
-typedef std::char_traits<wchar_t> string16_char_traits; |
- |
-} // namespace base |
- |
-#elif defined(WCHAR_T_IS_UTF32) |
- |
-namespace base { |
- |
-typedef uint16 char16; |
- |
-// char16 versions of the functions required by string16_char_traits; these |
-// are based on the wide character functions of similar names ("w" or "wcs" |
-// instead of "c16"). |
-BASE_EXPORT int c16memcmp(const char16* s1, const char16* s2, size_t n); |
-BASE_EXPORT size_t c16len(const char16* s); |
-BASE_EXPORT const char16* c16memchr(const char16* s, char16 c, size_t n); |
-BASE_EXPORT char16* c16memmove(char16* s1, const char16* s2, size_t n); |
-BASE_EXPORT char16* c16memcpy(char16* s1, const char16* s2, size_t n); |
-BASE_EXPORT char16* c16memset(char16* s, char16 c, size_t n); |
- |
-struct string16_char_traits { |
- typedef char16 char_type; |
- typedef int int_type; |
- |
- // int_type needs to be able to hold each possible value of char_type, and in |
- // addition, the distinct value of eof(). |
- COMPILE_ASSERT(sizeof(int_type) > sizeof(char_type), unexpected_type_width); |
- |
- typedef std::streamoff off_type; |
- typedef mbstate_t state_type; |
- typedef std::fpos<state_type> pos_type; |
- |
- static void assign(char_type& c1, const char_type& c2) { |
- c1 = c2; |
- } |
- |
- static bool eq(const char_type& c1, const char_type& c2) { |
- return c1 == c2; |
- } |
- static bool lt(const char_type& c1, const char_type& c2) { |
- return c1 < c2; |
- } |
- |
- static int compare(const char_type* s1, const char_type* s2, size_t n) { |
- return c16memcmp(s1, s2, n); |
- } |
- |
- static size_t length(const char_type* s) { |
- return c16len(s); |
- } |
- |
- static const char_type* find(const char_type* s, size_t n, |
- const char_type& a) { |
- return c16memchr(s, a, n); |
- } |
- |
- static char_type* move(char_type* s1, const char_type* s2, int_type n) { |
- return c16memmove(s1, s2, n); |
- } |
- |
- static char_type* copy(char_type* s1, const char_type* s2, size_t n) { |
- return c16memcpy(s1, s2, n); |
- } |
- |
- static char_type* assign(char_type* s, size_t n, char_type a) { |
- return c16memset(s, a, n); |
- } |
- |
- static int_type not_eof(const int_type& c) { |
- return eq_int_type(c, eof()) ? 0 : c; |
- } |
- |
- static char_type to_char_type(const int_type& c) { |
- return char_type(c); |
- } |
- |
- static int_type to_int_type(const char_type& c) { |
- return int_type(c); |
- } |
- |
- static bool eq_int_type(const int_type& c1, const int_type& c2) { |
- return c1 == c2; |
- } |
- |
- static int_type eof() { |
- return static_cast<int_type>(EOF); |
- } |
-}; |
- |
-typedef std::basic_string<char16, base::string16_char_traits> string16; |
- |
-BASE_EXPORT extern std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& out, |
- const string16& str); |
- |
-// This is required by googletest to print a readable output on test failures. |
-BASE_EXPORT extern void PrintTo(const string16& str, std::ostream* out); |
- |
-} // namespace base |
- |
-// The string class will be explicitly instantiated only once, in string16.cc. |
-// |
-// std::basic_string<> in GNU libstdc++ contains a static data member, |
-// _S_empty_rep_storage, to represent empty strings. When an operation such |
-// as assignment or destruction is performed on a string, causing its existing |
-// data member to be invalidated, it must not be freed if this static data |
-// member is being used. Otherwise, it counts as an attempt to free static |
-// (and not allocated) data, which is a memory error. |
-// |
-// Generally, due to C++ template magic, _S_empty_rep_storage will be marked |
-// as a coalesced symbol, meaning that the linker will combine multiple |
-// instances into a single one when generating output. |
-// |
-// If a string class is used by multiple shared libraries, a problem occurs. |
-// Each library will get its own copy of _S_empty_rep_storage. When strings |
-// are passed across a library boundary for alteration or destruction, memory |
-// errors will result. GNU libstdc++ contains a configuration option, |
-// --enable-fully-dynamic-string (_GLIBCXX_FULLY_DYNAMIC_STRING), which |
-// disables the static data member optimization, but it's a good optimization |
-// and non-STL code is generally at the mercy of the system's STL |
-// configuration. Fully-dynamic strings are not the default for GNU libstdc++ |
-// libstdc++ itself or for the libstdc++ installations on the systems we care |
-// about, such as Mac OS X and relevant flavors of Linux. |
-// |
-// See also http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24196 . |
-// |
-// To avoid problems, string classes need to be explicitly instantiated only |
-// once, in exactly one library. All other string users see it via an "extern" |
-// declaration. This is precisely how GNU libstdc++ handles |
-// std::basic_string<char> (string) and std::basic_string<wchar_t> (wstring). |
-// |
-// This also works around a Mac OS X linker bug in ld64-85.2.1 (Xcode 3.1.2), |
-// in which the linker does not fully coalesce symbols when dead code |
-// stripping is enabled. This bug causes the memory errors described above |
-// to occur even when a std::basic_string<> does not cross shared library |
-// boundaries, such as in statically-linked executables. |
-// |
-// TODO(mark): File this bug with Apple and update this note with a bug number. |
- |
-extern template |
-class BASE_EXPORT std::basic_string<base::char16, base::string16_char_traits>; |
- |
-#endif // WCHAR_T_IS_UTF32 |
- |
-// TODO(brettw) update users of string16 to use the namespace and remove |
-// this "using". |
-using base::char16; |
-using base::string16; |
- |
-#endif // BASE_STRING16_H_ |
+// This file has moved, please use the new location. |
+// TODO(avi) remove this file when all users have been updated. |
+#include "base/strings/string16.h" |