ai-content-maker/.venv/Lib/site-packages/torch/include/c10/util/Deprecated.h

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2024-05-03 04:18:51 +03:00
#pragma once
/**
* This file provides portable macros for marking declarations
* as deprecated. You should generally use C10_DEPRECATED,
* except when marking 'using' declarations as deprecated,
* in which case you should use C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING
* (due to portability concerns).
*/
// Sample usage:
//
// C10_DEPRECATED void bad_func();
// struct C10_DEPRECATED BadStruct {
// ...
// };
// NB: __cplusplus doesn't work for MSVC, so for now MSVC always uses
// the "__declspec(deprecated)" implementation and not the C++14
// "[[deprecated]]" attribute. We tried enabling "[[deprecated]]" for C++14 on
// MSVC, but ran into issues with some older MSVC versions.
#if (defined(__cplusplus) && __cplusplus >= 201402L)
#define C10_DEPRECATED [[deprecated]]
#define C10_DEPRECATED_MESSAGE(message) [[deprecated(message)]]
#elif defined(__GNUC__)
#define C10_DEPRECATED __attribute__((deprecated))
// TODO Is there some way to implement this?
#define C10_DEPRECATED_MESSAGE(message) __attribute__((deprecated))
#elif defined(_MSC_VER)
#define C10_DEPRECATED __declspec(deprecated)
#define C10_DEPRECATED_MESSAGE(message) __declspec(deprecated(message))
#else
#warning "You need to implement C10_DEPRECATED for this compiler"
#define C10_DEPRECATED
#endif
// Sample usage:
//
// C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING(BadType, int)
//
// which is the portable version of
//
// using BadType [[deprecated]] = int;
// technically [[deprecated]] syntax is from c++14 standard, but it works in
// many compilers.
#if defined(__has_cpp_attribute)
#if __has_cpp_attribute(deprecated) && !defined(__CUDACC__)
#define C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING(TypeName, TypeThingy) \
using TypeName [[deprecated]] = TypeThingy;
#endif
#endif
#if defined(_MSC_VER)
#if defined(__CUDACC__)
// neither [[deprecated]] nor __declspec(deprecated) work on nvcc on Windows;
// you get the error:
//
// error: attribute does not apply to any entity
//
// So we just turn the macro off in this case.
#if defined(C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING)
#undef C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING
#endif
#define C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING(TypeName, TypeThingy) \
using TypeName = TypeThingy;
#else
// [[deprecated]] does work in windows without nvcc, though msc doesn't support
// `__has_cpp_attribute` when c++14 is supported, otherwise
// __declspec(deprecated) is used as the alternative.
#ifndef C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING
#if defined(_MSVC_LANG) && _MSVC_LANG >= 201402L
#define C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING(TypeName, TypeThingy) \
using TypeName [[deprecated]] = TypeThingy;
#else
#define C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING(TypeName, TypeThingy) \
using TypeName = __declspec(deprecated) TypeThingy;
#endif
#endif
#endif
#endif
#if !defined(C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING) && defined(__GNUC__)
// nvcc has a bug where it doesn't understand __attribute__((deprecated))
// declarations even when the host compiler supports it. We'll only use this gcc
// attribute when not cuda, and when using a GCC compiler that doesn't support
// the c++14 syntax we checked for above (available in __GNUC__ >= 5)
#if !defined(__CUDACC__)
#define C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING(TypeName, TypeThingy) \
using TypeName __attribute__((deprecated)) = TypeThingy;
#else
// using cuda + gcc < 5, neither deprecated syntax is available so turning off.
#define C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING(TypeName, TypeThingy) \
using TypeName = TypeThingy;
#endif
#endif
#if !defined(C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING)
#warning "You need to implement C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING for this compiler"
#define C10_DEFINE_DEPRECATED_USING
#endif