A destroying operator delete takes responsibility for calling the destructor
for the object it is deleting; this is intended to be useful for sized
delete of a class allocated with a trailing buffer, where the compiler can't
know the size of the allocation, and so would pass the wrong size to the
non-destroying sized operator delete.
gcc/c-family/
* c-cppbuiltin.c (c_cpp_builtins): Define
__cpp_impl_destroying_delete.
gcc/cp/
* call.c (std_destroying_delete_t_p, destroying_delete_p): New.
(aligned_deallocation_fn_p, usual_deallocation_fn_p): Use
destroying_delete_p.
(build_op_delete_call): Handle destroying delete.
* decl2.c (coerce_delete_type): Handle destroying delete.
* init.c (build_delete): Don't call dtor with destroying delete.
* optimize.c (build_delete_destructor_body): Likewise.
libstdc++-v3/
* libsupc++/new (std::destroying_delete_t): New.
From-SVN: r266053
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