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1513. 'launch' enum too restrictiveSection: 32.10 [futures] Status: Resolved Submitter: Switzerland Opened: 2010-08-25 Last modified: 2016-01-28
Priority: Not Prioritized
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Discussion:
Addresses CH-36
Providing only three different possible values for the enum launch
and saying that launch::any
means either launch::sync
or launch::async
is very restricting. This hinders future implementors to provide clever infrastructures that can simply by used by a call to async(launch::any,...)
. Also there is no hook for an implementation to provide additional alternatives to launch
enumeration and no useful means to combine those (i.e. interpret them like flags). We believe something like async(launch::sync | launch::async, ...)
should be allowed and can become especially useful if one could say also something like async(launch::any & ~launch::sync, ....)
respectively. This flexibility might limit the features usable in the function called through async()
, but it will allow a path to effortless profit from improved hardware/software without complicating the programming model when just using async(launch::any,...)
[ Resolution proposed by ballot comment: ]
Change in 32.10.1 [futures.overview] 'enum class launch' to allow further implementation defined values and provide the following bit-operators on the launch values (operator|
, operator&
, operator~
delivering a launch
value).
launch
enums, but we shouldn't limit the standard to just 32 or 64 available bits in that case and also should keep the launch enums in their own enum namespace. Change [future.async] p3 according to the changes to enum launch
. change --launch::any
to "the implementation may choose any of the policies it provides." Note: this can mean that an implementation may restrict the called function to take all required information by copy in case it will be called in a different address space, or even, on a different processor type. To ensure that a call is either performed like launch::async
or launch::sync
describe one should call async(launch::sync|launch::async,...)
[ 2010-11-02 Daniel comments: ]
The new paper n3113 provides concrete wording.
Proposed resolution:
Resolved by n3188.
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