Version 1.77.0
Version 1.77.0
August 11th, 2021 14:25 GMT
Platform | File | SHA256 Hash |
---|---|---|
unix | boost_1_77_0.tar.bz2 | fc9f85fc030e233142908241af7a846e60630aa7388de9a5fafb1f3a26840854 |
boost_1_77_0.tar.gz | 5347464af5b14ac54bb945dc68f1dd7c56f0dad7262816b956138fc53bcc0131 | |
windows | boost_1_77_0.7z | f2dd9722b21450daf5ce8ef82c2d99c7ec304f913ee6c6b7f047d5639503dda1 |
boost_1_77_0.zip | d2886ceff60c35fc6dc9120e8faa960c1e9535f2d7ce447469eae9836110ea77 |
New Libraries
-
Describe: A C++14 reflection library, from Peter Dimov. Provides macros for describing enumerators and struct/class members, and primitives for querying this information.
-
Lambda2: A C++14, dependency-free, single header lambda library, from Peter Dimov. Allows simple function objects to be constructed via expressions such as
_1 + 5
,_1 % 2 == 0
,_1 > _2
, or_1 == ' ' || _1 == '\t'
.
Updated Libraries
-
Any:
-
Added
boost::anys::basic_any
- a data type with customizable Small Object Optimization whose instances can hold instances of any type that satisfies ValueType requirements (many thanks to Ruslan Arutyunyan @rarutyun). If you are not sure that you really need it, then useboost::any
instead. -
Started using GithubActions CI for additional testing
-
-
Asio:
-
Added support for cancellation of individual asynchronous operations.
-
Added the
associator
trait, used to generically forward associators. -
Changed all asynchronous operations implemented in Asio to invoke their completion handlers as rvalue references.
-
Added support for asynchronous operations with multiple completion signatures.
-
Added
operator&&
andoperator||
forawaitable<>
, to allow coroutines to be trivially awaited in parallel. -
Added the
experimental::as_tuple
completion token adapter. -
Added the
experimental::append
completion token adapter. -
Added the
experimental::prepend
completion token adapter. -
Added the
experimental::deferred
completion token, whicih allows deferred execution of asynchronous operations. -
Added the
experimental::parallel_group
class andexperimental::make_parallel_group
function. -
Added
experimental::promise
, which allows eager execution and synchronisation of asynchronous operations. -
Added the
experimental::coro
class template, a C++20 coroutine primitive with the ability to combine both asynchronous waiting (co_await
) and yielding (co_yield
). -
Added move assignment to
ssl::stream<>
. -
Changed
co_spawn
todispatch
the coroutine's initial step to the executor. -
Enabled additional optimisations for
any_executor
andany_io_executor
when used with asynchronous operations. -
Added the
nodiscard
attribute toawaitable<>
. -
Increased the number of cached slots in the default recycling allocator.
-
Changed the default allocator behaviour to respect alignment requirements, to support over-aligned types.
-
Ensured the result strings are always initialised in reverse name resolution.
-
Fixed recursive template instantiation issues in
use_awaitable_t::executor_with_default
. -
Fixed the
any_io_executor
equality operators to correctly return a result based on the target executor. -
Fixed
strand<>
to avoid using a potentially moved-from executor. -
Ensured gcc tests are not used for clang when detecting compiler features.
-
Disabled coroutines support for the clang shipped with MSVC.
-
Fixed compatibility with recent LibreSSL when
OPENSSL_NO_SSL_INTERN
is defined. -
Fixed
posix::basic_stream_descriptor
move operations to work with non-defaulted executors. -
Consult the Revision History for further details.
-
-
Atomic:
-
Added
make_atomic_ref
andmake_ipc_atomic_ref
factory functions for constructing atomic reference objects. -
Added C++17 template argument deduction guides for
atomic_ref
andipc_atomic_ref
to allow omitting template arguments when they can be deduced from constructor arguments.
-
-
Beast:
-
This maintenance update brings minor bug fixes and updated CI reporting.
-
We'd love to know how you or your company use Beast, consider adding an entry to the Companies and Individuals Using Beast list.
-
See the full Release Notes for a complete list of changes.
-
-
Conversion:
-
Fixed broken links (PR#23).
-
Started using GithubActions CI for additional testing
-
DLL:
-
More runtime checks for malformed ELFs in
boost::dll::library_info
-
In
boost::dll::library_info
use info from.dynsym
ELF section if.symtab
is empty or missing -
List protected ELF symbols in
boost::dll::library_info
as they are available for import (#50) -
Remove unneeded convert from
wchar_t
to char on POSIX environment, thanks to Vladislav Shchapov (PR#49) -
Started using GithubAction CI for additional testing
-
-
Filesystem:
-
Introducing Boost.Filesystem v4. This new version of the library removes all deprecated features of v3 and also makes a number of breaking API changes intended to make Boost.Filesystem more compatible with std::filesystem introduced in C++17. The differences are described in the release notes and documentation using v3 and v4 tags and are also summarised in a separate section. Users can select Boost.Filesystem version by defining
BOOST_FILESYSTEM_VERSION
macro to either 3 or 4 when compiling their code. There is no need to separately compile Boost.Filesystem for each library version - a single binary supports both v3 and v4. Users should avoid using both v3 and v4 in the same application as this can lead to subtle bugs. Currently, v3 is the default. In a future release v4 will become the default, and eventually v3 will be removed. v4 is functional, but it is still a work in progress and there may be breaking API changes in the future. -
v4:
path::filename
,path::stem
andpath::extension
no longer consider root name or root directory of the path as a filename if the path only consists of those components. For example, on Windowspath("C:").filename()
used to return "C:" andpath("C:\\").filename()
used to return "\" and both will return an empty path now. (#88, #194) -
v4:
path::stem
andpath::extension
no longer treat a filename that starts with a dot and has no other dots as an extension. Filenames starting with a dot are commonly treated as filenames with an empty extension. The leading dot is used to indicate a hidden file on most UNIX-like systems. (#88) -
New: Improved support for various path prefixes on Windows. Added support for local device prefix ("\\.\") and experimental support for NT path prefix ("\??\"). The prefixes will be included in the root name of a path. Note that using the prefixes with Boost.Filesystem v3 can lead to surprising results (e.g.
path("\\\\.\\").stem() == "\\\\"
). It is recommended to use the prefixes only with Boost.Filesystem v4. -
Reworked
path::lexically_normal
implementation to eliminate some cases of duplicate dot (".") elements in the normalized paths. -
New: Added runtime detection of the
statx
andgetrandom
system calls on Linux. This can be useful if the syscall is present at compile time but fails withENOSYS
at run time (for example, in Docker containers that restrict the syscall, even if available on the host). (#172) -
New: Added support for disabling usage of various system APIs at library build time. This can be useful when a certain API is detected as present by the library configuration scripts but must not be used for some reason (for example, when runtime detection does not work on the target system). See the description of configuration macros in the library documentationfor for more details.
-
New: Added
copy_options::synchronize_data
andcopy_options::synchronize
options for thecopy_file
operation. These options allow to synchronize the written data and attributes with the permanent storage. These options are expensive in terms of performance, but allow to ensure reliability of the copied data. Note thatcopy_file
performed implicit data synchronization on POSIX systems since Boost.Filesystem 1.74.0. This release adds support for more platforms and disables data synchronization by default while allowing the caller to explicitly request it. (#186) -
Added handling of
EINTR
error code on POSIX systems for some system calls issued internally. In particular,EINTR
could have been ignored onclose
, which on HP-UX would result in a leaked file descriptor. -
In the
copy_file
implementations based on Linuxsendfile
andcopy_file_range
system calls, added handling of error codes indicating that a particular filesystem does not support the system call and fall back to the genericread
/write
loop. This should fixcopy_file
failing on eCryptFS and possibly other filesystems. (#184) -
The
copy_file_range
system call is now used since Linux kernel 4.5, whereas previously it was only enabled since 5.3. Thecopy_file
implementation will fall back tosendfile
orread
/write
loop ifcopy_file_range
fails to copy a given file across filesystems. -
The
copy_file
implementations based on Linuxsendfile
andcopy_file_range
system calls will not be used on filesystems that are known to contain files with generated content. These system calls are incompatible with such files, and copying them would result in zero-sized files. The genericread
/write
loop will be used instead. Currently, the blacklisted filesystems are: procfs, sysfs, tracefs and debugfs. -
In the
copy_file
implementation based onread
/write
loop, increased the maximum size of the buffer used for temporary storage and take into account the target filesystem block size for more optimal performance. -
On Windows CE, calling
current_path
to obtain the current path for a process will now fail with an error instead of returning successfully with a root path. This platform does not support current directory. Changing the current path was already failing similarly in previous releases of Boost.Filesystem. -
In
canonical
, fixed the check for a symlink referencing a directory above root, if an earlier symlink was resolved to an absolute path with a different root from the original path. -
In
canonical
, added a limit for the maximum number of symlinks that can be resolved during the call. The limit is currently at least 40 symlinks. -
On Windows,
canonical
andweakly_canonical
will now usepath::preferred_separator
for the root directory separator in the resulting paths. This fixes "file not found" errors caused by Windows API not handling generic separators in UNC paths and paths that start with the Win32 filesystem prefix ("\\?\"). (#87, #187) -
New: Added
weakly_canonical
overloads takingbase
path as an argument. -
On Windows,
weakly_canonical
no longer fails with an error if the input path contains elements that do not exist in the filesystem but are cancelled by a subsequent dot-dot ("..") element. For example,weakly_canonical("C:\\a\\..")
would previously fail if "C:\a" directory did not exist. (#201) -
In
read_symlink
on Windows, corrected reparse point handling. The operation would return an empty path for some mount points (for example, created by Box cloud storage driver) and directory junction points that had empty print names. The new implementation now parses substitute name of the reparse point and attempts to reconstruct a Win32 path from it. (#187) -
On Windows, file streams provided in
boost/filesystem/fstream.hpp
will use wide character paths on libc++ versions 7.0 and higher, when the standard library supports opening files with wide character paths. (#181) -
On Windows, creating symlinks should no longer require elevated privileges, if Windows is configured in Developer mode.
-
With some compilers, global objects used internally in Boost.Filesystem are now destroyed after user's global destructors are called. This allows to call Boost.Filesystem methods during the program termination stage. In particular, this concerns the path locale that is used for character code conversion and can be installed by calling
path::imbue
. The supported compilers include MSVC, GCC and Clang, as well as other compilers that support customizing program initialization order through#pragma section
(for MSVC-compatible compilers) or__attribute__ ((init_priority))
(for GCC-compatible compilers).
-
-
Geometry:
-
Improvements
-
PR#812 Umbrella strategies for distance and comparable_distance (undocumented for now).
-
PR#840 Umbrella strategies for various algorithms (undocumented for now).
-
PR#850 Introduced DynamicGeometry and GeometryCollection concepts and support in some algorithms (undocumented for now).
-
PR#855 Various improvements related to strategies. Default strategies are now included with algorithms.
-
-
Bugfixes
-
PR#832 Fixed box spherical and geographic area computation.
-
PR#853 Fixed geographic disjoint segment/box.
-
PR#866 Fixed serialization of rtree containing lesser number of elements in root node than minimum.
-
PR#886 Fixed knn rtree query bug causing it to be slow for big k.
-
Various fixes in set operations and buffer.
-
-
-
JSON:
-
value_to
supportsTupleLike
types. -
value_to
andvalue_from
supportstd::array
and similar types. -
Implicit conversion operator from
string
tostd::string_view
. -
std::hash
specializations for json types. -
Fixed allocation errors in
object
andkey_value_pair
. -
Fixed crash when constructing
array
from a pair of iterators that form an empty range.
-
-
LexicalCast:
-
Fixed assignment to an int of a floating point value that is out of representable range for int.
-
Started using GithubActions CI for additional testing
-
-
Mp11:
-
Added
mp_intersperse
,mp_split
,mp_join
-
-
Multi-index Containers:
-
Maintenance work.
-
-
Nowide:
-
Allow for usage of
iostream
classes beforemain
(best effort, works for most environments) -
Fix initialization of
rdbuf
incin/cout/cerr
for redirected input/output -
Fix corner case in
cin::unget()
after usingputback()
-
Fix possibly delayed
close
offilebuf
after move assignment -
Improve performance of
utf8_codecvt
-
-
PFR:
-
A MurMur Hash based implementation of hash_combine() is now used to reduce collisions count and improve quality of
boost::pfr::hash_value()
-
Visual Studio 2017 now supported in C++14 mode (thanks to Denis Mikhailov aka @denzor200)
-
Issues found by inspect tool were fixed
-
Fixed some warnings, including removal of extra semicolons in include/boost/pfr/detail/fields_count.hpp (#72)
-
Added a compile time assert for inherited types (thanks to Denis Mikhailov aka @denzor200)
-
Reflection of aggregates with non movable fields is now possible if guaranteed copy elision is on
-
Fixed spelling issues
-
Started using GithubActions CI for additional testing
-
-
PropertyTree:
-
This is a maintenance release.
-
Extend compiler coverage in CI.
-
Fix Boost compatibility for CMakeLists.txt.
-
-
System:
-
The conversion operator from
error_category
tostd::error_category
has been improved and no longer requires<map>
or<mutex>
. -
The comparison operators of
error_category
are now inline friends instead of member functions (a side effect of the previous change.) -
error_condition
now defers callinggeneric_category()
to avoid instantiating the object until it's actually needed. -
error_condition::failed
anderror_condition::message
have been undeprecated, andoperator bool()
now once again returnsfailed()
. -
The system category now doesn't call
generic_category()
, to avoid instantiating the object. -
The return value of
default_error_condition
changes in some cases into anerror_condition
from the generic category, instead of from the system category. This happens on POSIX when the inputerror_code
is from the system category and does not correspond to anyerrc_t
value. -
The interoperability of
error_code
andstd::error_code
has been improved substantially. It is now possible to constructboost::system::error_code
fromstd::error_code
, and it's possible to passboost::system::error_code
to functions takingstd::error_code&
. -
A stream insertion operator for
error_condition
has been added.
-
Updated Tools
-
Build:
-
Includes release of B2 version 4.6.1.
-
Compilers Tested
Boost's primary test compilers are:
-
Linux:
-
Clang: 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 12.0.0
-
Clang, C++11: 3.4, 11.0.0
-
Clang, C++14: 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 4.0, 5.0, 12.0.0
-
Clang, C++17: 6.0.1, 7.0.0, 8.0.0, 9.0.0, 10.0.0, 11.0.0, 12.0.0
-
Clang, C++20: 11.0.0, 12.0.0, 13.0.0
-
GCC: 4.6.3, 11
-
GCC, C++11: 4.7.3, 4.8.5, 11
-
GCC, C++14: 5.4.0, 6.4.0, 7.3.0, 8.0.1, 9.1.0, 11
-
GCC, C++17: 7.3.0, 8.0.1, 9.1.0, 11
-
GCC, C++20: 8.0.1, 9.1.0, 10, 11
-
-
OS X:
-
Apple Clang: 11.0.3
-
Apple Clang, C++11: 11.0.3
-
Apple Clang, C++14: 11.0.3
-
Apple Clang, C++17: 11.0.3
-
Apple Clang, C++20: 11.0.3
-
-
Windows:
-
Visual C++: 10.0, 11.0, 12.0, 14.0, 14.1, 14.2
-
Acknowledgements
Marshall Clow, Michael Caisse and Glen Fernandes managed this release.