|  | // Copyright 2016 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_BIT_CAST_H_ | 
|  | #define BASE_BIT_CAST_H_ | 
|  |  | 
|  | #include <string.h> | 
|  | #include <type_traits> | 
|  |  | 
|  | #include "base/compiler_specific.h" | 
|  | #include "build/build_config.h" | 
|  |  | 
|  | // bit_cast<Dest,Source> is a template function that implements the equivalent | 
|  | // of "*reinterpret_cast<Dest*>(&source)".  We need this in very low-level | 
|  | // functions like the protobuf library and fast math support. | 
|  | // | 
|  | //   float f = 3.14159265358979; | 
|  | //   int i = bit_cast<int32_t>(f); | 
|  | //   // i = 0x40490fdb | 
|  | // | 
|  | // The classical address-casting method is: | 
|  | // | 
|  | //   // WRONG | 
|  | //   float f = 3.14159265358979;            // WRONG | 
|  | //   int i = * reinterpret_cast<int*>(&f);  // WRONG | 
|  | // | 
|  | // The address-casting method actually produces undefined behavior according to | 
|  | // the ISO C++98 specification, section 3.10 ("basic.lval"), paragraph 15. | 
|  | // (This did not substantially change in C++11.)  Roughly, this section says: if | 
|  | // an object in memory has one type, and a program accesses it with a different | 
|  | // type, then the result is undefined behavior for most values of "different | 
|  | // type". | 
|  | // | 
|  | // This is true for any cast syntax, either *(int*)&f or | 
|  | // *reinterpret_cast<int*>(&f).  And it is particularly true for conversions | 
|  | // between integral lvalues and floating-point lvalues. | 
|  | // | 
|  | // The purpose of this paragraph is to allow optimizing compilers to assume that | 
|  | // expressions with different types refer to different memory.  Compilers are | 
|  | // known to take advantage of this.  So a non-conforming program quietly | 
|  | // produces wildly incorrect output. | 
|  | // | 
|  | // The problem is not the use of reinterpret_cast.  The problem is type punning: | 
|  | // holding an object in memory of one type and reading its bits back using a | 
|  | // different type. | 
|  | // | 
|  | // The C++ standard is more subtle and complex than this, but that is the basic | 
|  | // idea. | 
|  | // | 
|  | // Anyways ... | 
|  | // | 
|  | // bit_cast<> calls memcpy() which is blessed by the standard, especially by the | 
|  | // example in section 3.9 .  Also, of course, bit_cast<> wraps up the nasty | 
|  | // logic in one place. | 
|  | // | 
|  | // Fortunately memcpy() is very fast.  In optimized mode, compilers replace | 
|  | // calls to memcpy() with inline object code when the size argument is a | 
|  | // compile-time constant.  On a 32-bit system, memcpy(d,s,4) compiles to one | 
|  | // load and one store, and memcpy(d,s,8) compiles to two loads and two stores. | 
|  |  | 
|  | template <class Dest, class Source> | 
|  | inline Dest bit_cast(const Source& source) { | 
|  | static_assert(sizeof(Dest) == sizeof(Source), | 
|  | "bit_cast requires source and destination to be the same size"); | 
|  |  | 
|  | #if (__GNUC__ > 5 || (__GNUC__ == 5 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 1) || \ | 
|  | (defined(__clang__) && defined(_LIBCPP_VERSION))) | 
|  | // GCC 5.1 contains the first libstdc++ with is_trivially_copyable. | 
|  | // Assume libc++ Just Works: is_trivially_copyable added on May 13th 2011. | 
|  | // However, with libc++ when GCC is the compiler the trait is buggy, see | 
|  | // crbug.com/607158, so fall back to the less strict variant for non-clang. | 
|  | static_assert(std::is_trivially_copyable<Dest>::value, | 
|  | "non-trivially-copyable bit_cast is undefined"); | 
|  | static_assert(std::is_trivially_copyable<Source>::value, | 
|  | "non-trivially-copyable bit_cast is undefined"); | 
|  | #elif HAS_FEATURE(is_trivially_copyable) | 
|  | // The compiler supports an equivalent intrinsic. | 
|  | static_assert(__is_trivially_copyable(Dest), | 
|  | "non-trivially-copyable bit_cast is undefined"); | 
|  | static_assert(__is_trivially_copyable(Source), | 
|  | "non-trivially-copyable bit_cast is undefined"); | 
|  | #elif COMPILER_GCC | 
|  | // Fallback to compiler intrinsic on GCC and clang (which pretends to be | 
|  | // GCC). This isn't quite the same as is_trivially_copyable but it'll do for | 
|  | // our purpose. | 
|  | static_assert(__has_trivial_copy(Dest), | 
|  | "non-trivially-copyable bit_cast is undefined"); | 
|  | static_assert(__has_trivial_copy(Source), | 
|  | "non-trivially-copyable bit_cast is undefined"); | 
|  | #else | 
|  | // Do nothing, let the bots handle it. | 
|  | #endif | 
|  |  | 
|  | Dest dest; | 
|  | memcpy(&dest, &source, sizeof(dest)); | 
|  | return dest; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #endif  // BASE_BIT_CAST_H_ |