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-<!--#include virtual="../menu.html.incl"-->
-
-<div id="content">
-<h1>Automatic Reference Counting</h1>
-
-<div id="toc">
-</div>
-
-<div id="meta">
-<h1>About this document</h1>
-
-<div id="meta.purpose">
-<h1>Purpose</h1>
-
-<p>The first and primary purpose of this document is to serve as a
-complete technical specification of Automatic Reference Counting.
-Given a core Objective-C compiler and runtime, it should be possible
-to write a compiler and runtime which implements these new
-semantics.</p>
-
-<p>The secondary purpose is to act as a rationale for why ARC was
-designed in this way. This should remain tightly focused on the
-technical design and should not stray into marketing speculation.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- meta.purpose -->
-
-<div id="meta.background">
-<h1>Background</h1>
-
-<p>This document assumes a basic familiarity with C.</p>
-
-<p><span class="term">Blocks</span> are a C language extension for
-creating anonymous functions. Users interact with and transfer block
-objects using <span class="term">block pointers</span>, which are
-represented like a normal pointer. A block may capture values from
-local variables; when this occurs, memory must be dynamically
-allocated. The initial allocation is done on the stack, but the
-runtime provides a <tt>Block_copy</tt> function which, given a block
-pointer, either copies the underlying block object to the heap,
-setting its reference count to 1 and returning the new block pointer,
-or (if the block object is already on the heap) increases its
-reference count by 1. The paired function is <tt>Block_release</tt>,
-which decreases the reference count by 1 and destroys the object if
-the count reaches zero and is on the heap.</p>
-
-<p>Objective-C is a set of language extensions, significant enough to
-be considered a different language. It is a strict superset of C.
-The extensions can also be imposed on C++, producing a language called
-Objective-C++. The primary feature is a single-inheritance object
-system; we briefly describe the modern dialect.</p>
-
-<p>Objective-C defines a new type kind, collectively called
-the <span class="term">object pointer types</span>. This kind has two
-notable builtin members, <tt>id</tt> and <tt>Class</tt>; <tt>id</tt>
-is the final supertype of all object pointers. The validity of
-conversions between object pointer types is not checked at runtime.
-Users may define <span class="term">classes</span>; each class is a
-type, and the pointer to that type is an object pointer type. A class
-may have a superclass; its pointer type is a subtype of its
-superclass's pointer type. A class has a set
-of <span class="term">ivars</span>, fields which appear on all
-instances of that class. For every class <i>T</i> there's an
-associated metaclass; it has no fields, its superclass is the
-metaclass of <i>T</i>'s superclass, and its metaclass is a global
-class. Every class has a global object whose class is the
-class's metaclass; metaclasses have no associated type, so pointers to
-this object have type <tt>Class</tt>.</p>
-
-<p>A class declaration (<tt>@interface</tt>) declares a set
-of <span class="term">methods</span>. A method has a return type, a
-list of argument types, and a <span class="term">selector</span>: a
-name like <tt>foo:bar:baz:</tt>, where the number of colons
-corresponds to the number of formal arguments. A method may be an
-instance method, in which case it can be invoked on objects of the
-class, or a class method, in which case it can be invoked on objects
-of the metaclass. A method may be invoked by providing an object
-(called the <span class="term">receiver</span>) and a list of formal
-arguments interspersed with the selector, like so:</p>
-
-<pre>[receiver foo: fooArg bar: barArg baz: bazArg]</pre>
-
-<p>This looks in the dynamic class of the receiver for a method with
-this name, then in that class's superclass, etc., until it finds
-something it can execute. The receiver <q>expression</q> may also be
-the name of a class, in which case the actual receiver is the class
-object for that class, or (within method definitions) it may
-be <tt>super</tt>, in which case the lookup algorithm starts with the
-static superclass instead of the dynamic class. The actual methods
-dynamically found in a class are not those declared in the
-<tt>@interface</tt>, but those defined in a separate
-<tt>@implementation</tt> declaration; however, when compiling a
-call, typechecking is done based on the methods declared in the
-<tt>@interface</tt>.</p>
-
-<p>Method declarations may also be grouped into
-<span class="term">protocols</span>, which are not inherently
-associated with any class, but which classes may claim to follow.
-Object pointer types may be qualified with additional protocols that
-the object is known to support.</p>
-
-<p><span class="term">Class extensions</span> are collections of ivars
-and methods, designed to allow a class's <tt>@interface</tt> to be
-split across multiple files; however, there is still a primary
-implementation file which must see the <tt>@interface</tt>s of all
-class extensions.
-<span class="term">Categories</span> allow methods (but not ivars) to
-be declared <i>post hoc</i> on an arbitrary class; the methods in the
-category's <tt>@implementation</tt> will be dynamically added to that
-class's method tables which the category is loaded at runtime,
-replacing those methods in case of a collision.</p>
-
-<p>In the standard environment, objects are allocated on the heap, and
-their lifetime is manually managed using a reference count. This is
-done using two instance methods which all classes are expected to
-implement: <tt>retain</tt> increases the object's reference count by
-1, whereas <tt>release</tt> decreases it by 1 and calls the instance
-method <tt>dealloc</tt> if the count reaches 0. To simplify certain
-operations, there is also an <span class="term">autorelease
-pool</span>, a thread-local list of objects to call <tt>release</tt>
-on later; an object can be added to this pool by
-calling <tt>autorelease</tt> on it.</p>
-
-<p>Block pointers may be converted to type <tt>id</tt>; block objects
-are laid out in a way that makes them compatible with Objective-C
-objects. There is a builtin class that all block objects are
-considered to be objects of; this class implements <tt>retain</tt> by
-adjusting the reference count, not by calling <tt>Block_copy</tt>.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- meta.background -->
-
-<div id="meta.evolution">
-<h1>Evolution</h1>
-
-<p>ARC is under continual evolution, and this document must be updated
-as the language progresses.</p>
-
-<p>If a change increases the expressiveness of the language, for
-example by lifting a restriction or by adding new syntax, the change
-will be annotated with a revision marker, like so:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
- ARC applies to Objective-C pointer types, block pointer types, and
- <span class="revision"><span class="whenRevised">[beginning Apple
- 8.0, LLVM 3.8]</span> BPTRs declared within <code>extern
- "BCPL"</code> blocks</span>.
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>For now, it is sensible to version this document by the releases of
-its sole implementation (and its host project), clang.
-<q>LLVM X.Y</q> refers to an open-source release of clang from the
-LLVM project. <q>Apple X.Y</q> refers to an Apple-provided release of
-the Apple LLVM Compiler. Other organizations that prepare their own,
-separately-versioned clang releases and wish to maintain similar
-information in this document should send requests to cfe-dev.</p>
-
-<p>If a change decreases the expressiveness of the language, for
-example by imposing a new restriction, this should be taken as an
-oversight in the original specification and something to be avoided
-in all versions. Such changes are generally to be avoided.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- meta.evolution -->
-
-</div> <!-- meta -->
-
-<div id="general">
-<h1>General</h1>
-
-<p>Automatic Reference Counting implements automatic memory management
-for Objective-C objects and blocks, freeing the programmer from the
-need to explicitly insert retains and releases. It does not provide a
-cycle collector; users must explicitly manage the lifetime of their
-objects, breaking cycles manually or with weak or unsafe
-references.</p>
-
-<p>ARC may be explicitly enabled with the compiler
-flag <tt>-fobjc-arc</tt>. It may also be explicitly disabled with the
-compiler flag <tt>-fno-objc-arc</tt>. The last of these two flags
-appearing on the compile line <q>wins</q>.</p>
-
-<p>If ARC is enabled, <tt>__has_feature(objc_arc)</tt> will expand to
-1 in the preprocessor. For more information about <tt>__has_feature</tt>,
-see the <a href="LanguageExtensions.html#__has_feature_extension">language
-extensions</a> document.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- general -->
-
-<div id="objects">
-<h1>Retainable object pointers</h1>
-
-<p>This section describes retainable object pointers, their basic
-operations, and the restrictions imposed on their use under ARC. Note
-in particular that it covers the rules for pointer <em>values</em>
-(patterns of bits indicating the location of a pointed-to object), not
-pointer
-<em>objects</em> (locations in memory which store pointer values).
-The rules for objects are covered in the next section.</p>
-
-<p>A <span class="term">retainable object pointer</span>
-(or <q>retainable pointer</q>) is a value of
-a <span class="term">retainable object pointer type</span>
-(<q>retainable type</q>). There are three kinds of retainable object
-pointer types:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>block pointers (formed by applying the caret (<tt>^</tt>)
-declarator sigil to a function type)</li>
-<li>Objective-C object pointers (<tt>id</tt>, <tt>Class</tt>, <tt>NSFoo*</tt>, etc.)</li>
-<li>typedefs marked with <tt>__attribute__((NSObject))</tt></li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Other pointer types, such as <tt>int*</tt> and <tt>CFStringRef</tt>,
-are not subject to ARC's semantics and restrictions.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale">
-
-<p>Rationale: We are not at liberty to require
-all code to be recompiled with ARC; therefore, ARC must interoperate
-with Objective-C code which manages retains and releases manually. In
-general, there are three requirements in order for a
-compiler-supported reference-count system to provide reliable
-interoperation:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>The type system must reliably identify which objects are to be
-managed. An <tt>int*</tt> might be a pointer to a <tt>malloc</tt>'ed
-array, or it might be an interior pointer to such an array, or it might
-point to some field or local variable. In contrast, values of the
-retainable object pointer types are never interior.</li>
-<li>The type system must reliably indicate how to
-manage objects of a type. This usually means that the type must imply
-a procedure for incrementing and decrementing retain counts.
-Supporting single-ownership objects requires a lot more explicit
-mediation in the language.</li>
-<li>There must be reliable conventions for whether and
-when <q>ownership</q> is passed between caller and callee, for both
-arguments and return values. Objective-C methods follow such a
-convention very reliably, at least for system libraries on Mac OS X,
-and functions always pass objects at +0. The C-based APIs for Core
-Foundation objects, on the other hand, have much more varied transfer
-semantics.</li>
-</ul>
-</div> <!-- rationale -->
-
-<p>The use of <tt>__attribute__((NSObject))</tt> typedefs is not
-recommended. If it's absolutely necessary to use this attribute, be
-very explicit about using the typedef, and do not assume that it will
-be preserved by language features like <tt>__typeof</tt> and C++
-template argument substitution.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: any compiler operation which
-incidentally strips type <q>sugar</q> from a type will yield a type
-without the attribute, which may result in unexpected
-behavior.</p></div>
-
-<div id="objects.retains">
-<h1>Retain count semantics</h1>
-
-<p>A retainable object pointer is either a <span class="term">null
-pointer</span> or a pointer to a valid object. Furthermore, if it has
-block pointer type and is not <tt>null</tt> then it must actually be a
-pointer to a block object, and if it has <tt>Class</tt> type (possibly
-protocol-qualified) then it must actually be a pointer to a class
-object. Otherwise ARC does not enforce the Objective-C type system as
-long as the implementing methods follow the signature of the static
-type. It is undefined behavior if ARC is exposed to an invalid
-pointer.</p>
-
-<p>For ARC's purposes, a valid object is one with <q>well-behaved</q>
-retaining operations. Specifically, the object must be laid out such
-that the Objective-C message send machinery can successfully send it
-the following messages:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><tt>retain</tt>, taking no arguments and returning a pointer to
-the object.</li>
-<li><tt>release</tt>, taking no arguments and returning <tt>void</tt>.</li>
-<li><tt>autorelease</tt>, taking no arguments and returning a pointer
-to the object.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The behavior of these methods is constrained in the following ways.
-The term <span class="term">high-level semantics</span> is an
-intentionally vague term; the intent is that programmers must
-implement these methods in a way such that the compiler, modifying
-code in ways it deems safe according to these constraints, will not
-violate their requirements. For example, if the user puts logging
-statements in <tt>retain</tt>, they should not be surprised if those
-statements are executed more or less often depending on optimization
-settings. These constraints are not exhaustive of the optimization
-opportunities: values held in local variables are subject to
-additional restrictions, described later in this document.</p>
-
-<p>It is undefined behavior if a computation history featuring a send
-of <tt>retain</tt> followed by a send of <tt>release</tt> to the same
-object, with no intervening <tt>release</tt> on that object, is not
-equivalent under the high-level semantics to a computation
-history in which these sends are removed. Note that this implies that
-these methods may not raise exceptions.</p>
-
-<p>It is undefined behavior if a computation history features any use
-whatsoever of an object following the completion of a send
-of <tt>release</tt> that is not preceded by a send of <tt>retain</tt>
-to the same object.</p>
-
-<p>The behavior of <tt>autorelease</tt> must be equivalent to sending
-<tt>release</tt> when one of the autorelease pools currently in scope
-is popped. It may not throw an exception.</p>
-
-<p>When the semantics call for performing one of these operations on a
-retainable object pointer, if that pointer is <tt>null</tt> then the
-effect is a no-op.</p>
-
-<p>All of the semantics described in this document are subject to
-additional <a href="#optimization">optimization rules</a> which permit
-the removal or optimization of operations based on local knowledge of
-data flow. The semantics describe the high-level behaviors that the
-compiler implements, not an exact sequence of operations that a
-program will be compiled into.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- objects.retains -->
-
-<div id="objects.operands">
-<h1>Retainable object pointers as operands and arguments</h1>
-
-<p>In general, ARC does not perform retain or release operations when
-simply using a retainable object pointer as an operand within an
-expression. This includes:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>loading a retainable pointer from an object with non-weak
-<a href="#ownership">ownership</a>,</li>
-<li>passing a retainable pointer as an argument to a function or
-method, and</li>
-<li>receiving a retainable pointer as the result of a function or
-method call.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: while this might seem
-uncontroversial, it is actually unsafe when multiple expressions are
-evaluated in <q>parallel</q>, as with binary operators and calls,
-because (for example) one expression might load from an object while
-another writes to it. However, C and C++ already call this undefined
-behavior because the evaluations are unsequenced, and ARC simply
-exploits that here to avoid needing to retain arguments across a large
-number of calls.</p></div>
-
-<p>The remainder of this section describes exceptions to these rules,
-how those exceptions are detected, and what those exceptions imply
-semantically.</p>
-
-<div id="objects.operands.consumed">
-<h1>Consumed parameters</h1>
-
-<p>A function or method parameter of retainable object pointer type
-may be marked as <span class="term">consumed</span>, signifying that
-the callee expects to take ownership of a +1 retain count. This is
-done by adding the <tt>ns_consumed</tt> attribute to the parameter
-declaration, like so:</p>
-
-<pre>void foo(__attribute((ns_consumed)) id x);
-- (void) foo: (id) __attribute((ns_consumed)) x;</pre>
-
-<p>This attribute is part of the type of the function or method, not
-the type of the parameter. It controls only how the argument is
-passed and received.</p>
-
-<p>When passing such an argument, ARC retains the argument prior to
-making the call.</p>
-
-<p>When receiving such an argument, ARC releases the argument at the
-end of the function, subject to the usual optimizations for local
-values.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: this formalizes direct transfers
-of ownership from a caller to a callee. The most common scenario here
-is passing the <tt>self</tt> parameter to <tt>init</tt>, but it is
-useful to generalize. Typically, local optimization will remove any
-extra retains and releases: on the caller side the retain will be
-merged with a +1 source, and on the callee side the release will be
-rolled into the initialization of the parameter.</p></div>
-
-<p>The implicit <tt>self</tt> parameter of a method may be marked as
-consumed by adding <tt>__attribute__((ns_consumes_self))</tt> to the
-method declaration. Methods in the <tt>init</tt>
-<a href="#family">family</a> are treated as if they were implicitly
-marked with this attribute.</p>
-
-<p>It is undefined behavior if an Objective-C message send to a method
-with <tt>ns_consumed</tt> parameters (other than self) is made with a
-null receiver. It is undefined behavior if the method to which an
-Objective-C message send statically resolves to has a different set
-of <tt>ns_consumed</tt> parameters than the method it dynamically
-resolves to. It is undefined behavior if a block or function call is
-made through a static type with a different set of <tt>ns_consumed</tt>
-parameters than the implementation of the called block or function.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: consumed parameters with null
-receiver are a guaranteed leak. Mismatches with consumed parameters
-will cause over-retains or over-releases, depending on the direction.
-The rule about function calls is really just an application of the
-existing C/C++ rule about calling functions through an incompatible
-function type, but it's useful to state it explicitly.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- objects.operands.consumed -->
-
-<div id="objects.operands.retained-returns">
-<h1>Retained return values</h1>
-
-<p>A function or method which returns a retainable object pointer type
-may be marked as returning a retained value, signifying that the
-caller expects to take ownership of a +1 retain count. This is done
-by adding the <tt>ns_returns_retained</tt> attribute to the function or
-method declaration, like so:</p>
-
-<pre>id foo(void) __attribute((ns_returns_retained));
-- (id) foo __attribute((ns_returns_retained));</pre>
-
-<p>This attribute is part of the type of the function or method.</p>
-
-<p>When returning from such a function or method, ARC retains the
-value at the point of evaluation of the return statement, before
-leaving all local scopes.</p>
-
-<p>When receiving a return result from such a function or method, ARC
-releases the value at the end of the full-expression it is contained
-within, subject to the usual optimizations for local values.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: this formalizes direct transfers of
-ownership from a callee to a caller. The most common scenario this
-models is the retained return from <tt>init</tt>, <tt>alloc</tt>,
-<tt>new</tt>, and <tt>copy</tt> methods, but there are other cases in
-the frameworks. After optimization there are typically no extra
-retains and releases required.</p></div>
-
-<p>Methods in
-the <tt>alloc</tt>, <tt>copy</tt>, <tt>init</tt>, <tt>mutableCopy</tt>,
-and <tt>new</tt> <a href="#family">families</a> are implicitly marked
-<tt>__attribute__((ns_returns_retained))</tt>. This may be suppressed
-by explicitly marking the
-method <tt>__attribute__((ns_returns_not_retained))</tt>.</p>
-
-<p>It is undefined behavior if the method to which an Objective-C
-message send statically resolves has different retain semantics on its
-result from the method it dynamically resolves to. It is undefined
-behavior if a block or function call is made through a static type
-with different retain semantics on its result from the implementation
-of the called block or function.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: Mismatches with returned results
-will cause over-retains or over-releases, depending on the direction.
-Again, the rule about function calls is really just an application of
-the existing C/C++ rule about calling functions through an
-incompatible function type.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- objects.operands.retained-returns -->
-
-<div id="objects.operands.other-returns">
-<h1>Unretained return values</h1>
-
-<p>A method or function which returns a retainable object type but
-does not return a retained value must ensure that the object is
-still valid across the return boundary.</p>
-
-<p>When returning from such a function or method, ARC retains the
-value at the point of evaluation of the return statement, then leaves
-all local scopes, and then balances out the retain while ensuring that
-the value lives across the call boundary. In the worst case, this may
-involve an <tt>autorelease</tt>, but callers must not assume that the
-value is actually in the autorelease pool.</p>
-
-<p>ARC performs no extra mandatory work on the caller side, although
-it may elect to do something to shorten the lifetime of the returned
-value.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: it is common in non-ARC code to not
-return an autoreleased value; therefore the convention does not force
-either path. It is convenient to not be required to do unnecessary
-retains and autoreleases; this permits optimizations such as eliding
-retain/autoreleases when it can be shown that the original pointer
-will still be valid at the point of return.</p></div>
-
-<p>A method or function may be marked
-with <tt>__attribute__((ns_returns_autoreleased))</tt> to indicate
-that it returns a pointer which is guaranteed to be valid at least as
-long as the innermost autorelease pool. There are no additional
-semantics enforced in the definition of such a method; it merely
-enables optimizations in callers.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- objects.operands.other-returns -->
-
-<div id="objects.operands.casts">
-<h1>Bridged casts</h1>
-
-<p>A <span class="term">bridged cast</span> is a C-style cast
-annotated with one of three keywords:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><tt>(__bridge T) op</tt> casts the operand to the destination
-type <tt>T</tt>. If <tt>T</tt> is a retainable object pointer type,
-then <tt>op</tt> must have a non-retainable pointer type.
-If <tt>T</tt> is a non-retainable pointer type, then <tt>op</tt> must
-have a retainable object pointer type. Otherwise the cast is
-ill-formed. There is no transfer of ownership, and ARC inserts
-no retain operations.</li>
-
-<li><tt>(__bridge_retained T) op</tt> casts the operand, which must
-have retainable object pointer type, to the destination type, which
-must be a non-retainable pointer type. ARC retains the value, subject
-to the usual optimizations on local values, and the recipient is
-responsible for balancing that +1.</li>
-
-<li><tt>(__bridge_transfer T) op</tt> casts the operand, which must
-have non-retainable pointer type, to the destination type, which must
-be a retainable object pointer type. ARC will release the value at
-the end of the enclosing full-expression, subject to the usual
-optimizations on local values.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>These casts are required in order to transfer objects in and out of
-ARC control; see the rationale in the section
-on <a href="#objects.restrictions.conversion">conversion of retainable
-object pointers</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Using a <tt>__bridge_retained</tt> or <tt>__bridge_transfer</tt>
-cast purely to convince ARC to emit an unbalanced retain or release,
-respectively, is poor form.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- objects.operands.casts -->
-
-</div> <!-- objects.operands -->
-
-<div id="objects.restrictions">
-<h1>Restrictions</h1>
-
-<div id="objects.restrictions.conversion">
-<h1>Conversion of retainable object pointers</h1>
-
-<p>In general, a program which attempts to implicitly or explicitly
-convert a value of retainable object pointer type to any
-non-retainable type, or vice-versa, is ill-formed. For example, an
-Objective-C object pointer shall not be converted to <tt>void*</tt>.
-As an exception, cast to <tt>intptr_t</tt> is allowed because such
-casts are not transferring ownership. The <a href="#objects.operands.casts">bridged
-casts</a> may be used to perform these conversions where
-necessary.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: we cannot ensure the correct
-management of the lifetime of objects if they may be freely passed
-around as unmanaged types. The bridged casts are provided so that the
-programmer may explicitly describe whether the cast transfers control
-into or out of ARC.</p></div>
-
-<p>However, the following exceptions apply.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- objects.restrictions.conversion -->
-
-<div id="objects.restrictions.conversion-exception-known">
-<h1>Conversion to retainable object pointer type of
- expressions with known semantics</h1>
-
-<p><span class="revision"><span class="whenRevised">[beginning Apple
- 4.0, LLVM 3.1]</span> These exceptions have been greatly expanded;
- they previously applied only to a much-reduced subset which is
- difficult to categorize but which included null pointers, message
- sends (under the given rules), and the various global constants.</span></p>
-
-<p>An unbridged conversion to a retainable object pointer type from a
-type other than a retainable object pointer type is ill-formed, as
-discussed above, unless the operand of the cast has a syntactic form
-which is known retained, known unretained, or known
-retain-agnostic.</p>
-
-<p>An expression is <span class="term">known retain-agnostic</span> if
-it is:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>an Objective-C string literal,</li>
-<li>a load from a <tt>const</tt> system global variable of
-<a href="#misc.c-retainable">C retainable pointer type</a>, or</li>
-<li>a null pointer constant.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>An expression is <span class="term">known unretained</span> if it
-is an rvalue of <a href="#misc.c-retainable">C retainable
-pointer type</a> and it is:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>a direct call to a function, and either that function has the
- <tt>cf_returns_not_retained</tt> attribute or it is an
- <a href="#misc.c-retainable.audit">audited</a> function that does not
- have the <tt>cf_returns_retained</tt> attribute and does not follow
- the create/copy naming convention,</li>
-<li>a message send, and the declared method either has
- the <tt>cf_returns_not_retained</tt> attribute or it has neither
- the <tt>cf_returns_retained</tt> attribute nor a
- <a href="#family">selector family</a> that implies a retained
- result.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>An expression is <span class="term">known retained</span> if it is
-an rvalue of <a href="#misc.c-retainable">C retainable pointer type</a>
-and it is:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>a message send, and the declared method either has the
- <tt>cf_returns_retained</tt> attribute, or it does not have
- the <tt>cf_returns_not_retained</tt> attribute but it does have a
- <a href="#family">selector family</a> that implies a retained
- result.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Furthermore:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>a comma expression is classified according to its right-hand side,</li>
-<li>a statement expression is classified according to its result
-expression, if it has one,</li>
-<li>an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion applied to an Objective-C property
-lvalue is classified according to the underlying message send, and</li>
-<li>a conditional operator is classified according to its second and
-third operands, if they agree in classification, or else the other
-if one is known retain-agnostic.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>If the cast operand is known retained, the conversion is treated as
-a <tt>__bridge_transfer</tt> cast. If the cast operand is known
-unretained or known retain-agnostic, the conversion is treated as
-a <tt>__bridge</tt> cast.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: Bridging casts are annoying.
-Absent the ability to completely automate the management of CF
-objects, however, we are left with relatively poor attempts to reduce
-the need for a glut of explicit bridges. Hence these rules.</p>
-
-<p>We've so far consciously refrained from implicitly turning retained
-CF results from function calls into <tt>__bridge_transfer</tt> casts.
-The worry is that some code patterns &mdash; for example, creating a
-CF value, assigning it to an ObjC-typed local, and then
-calling <tt>CFRelease</tt> when done &mdash; are a bit too likely to
-be accidentally accepted, leading to mysterious behavior.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- objects.restrictions.conversion-exception-known -->
-
-<div id="objects.restrictions.conversion-exception-contextual">
-<h1>Conversion from retainable object pointer type in certain contexts</h1>
-
-<p><span class="revision"><span class="whenRevised">[beginning Apple
- 4.0, LLVM 3.1]</span></span></p>
-
-<p>If an expression of retainable object pointer type is explicitly
-cast to a <a href="#misc.c-retainable">C retainable pointer type</a>,
-the program is ill-formed as discussed above unless the result is
-immediately used:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>to initialize a parameter in an Objective-C message send where the
-parameter is not marked with the <tt>cf_consumed</tt> attribute, or</li>
-<li>to initialize a parameter in a direct call to
-an <a href="#misc.c-retainable.audit">audited</a> function where the
-parameter is not marked with the <tt>cf_consumed</tt> attribute.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: Consumed parameters are left out
-because ARC would naturally balance them with a retain, which was
-judged too treacherous. This is in part because several of the most
-common consuming functions are in the <tt>Release</tt> family, and it
-would be quite unfortunate for explicit releases to be silently
-balanced out in this way.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- objects.restrictions.conversion-exception-contextual -->
-
-</div> <!-- objects.restrictions -->
-
-</div> <!-- objects -->
-
-<div id="ownership">
-<h1>Ownership qualification</h1>
-
-<p>This section describes the behavior of <em>objects</em> of
-retainable object pointer type; that is, locations in memory which
-store retainable object pointers.</p>
-
-<p>A type is a <span class="term">retainable object owner type</span>
-if it is a retainable object pointer type or an array type whose
-element type is a retainable object owner type.</p>
-
-<p>An <span class="term">ownership qualifier</span> is a type
-qualifier which applies only to retainable object owner types. An array type is
-ownership-qualified according to its element type, and adding an ownership
-qualifier to an array type so qualifies its element type.</p>
-
-<p>A program is ill-formed if it attempts to apply an ownership qualifier
-to a type which is already ownership-qualified, even if it is the same
-qualifier. There is a single exception to this rule: an ownership qualifier
-may be applied to a substituted template type parameter, which overrides the
-ownership qualifier provided by the template argument.</p>
-
-<p>Except as described under
-the <a href="#ownership.inference">inference rules</a>, a program is
-ill-formed if it attempts to form a pointer or reference type to a
-retainable object owner type which lacks an ownership qualifier.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: these rules, together with the
-inference rules, ensure that all objects and lvalues of retainable
-object pointer type have an ownership qualifier. The ability to override an ownership qualifier during template substitution is required to counteract the <a href="#ownership.inference.template_arguments">inference of <tt>__strong</tt> for template type arguments</a>. </p></div>
-
-<p>There are four ownership qualifiers:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><tt>__autoreleasing</tt></li>
-<li><tt>__strong</tt></li>
-<li><tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt></li>
-<li><tt>__weak</tt></li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>A type is <span class="term">nontrivially ownership-qualified</span>
-if it is qualified with <tt>__autoreleasing</tt>, <tt>__strong</tt>, or
-<tt>__weak</tt>.</p>
-
-<div id="ownership.spelling">
-<h1>Spelling</h1>
-
-<p>The names of the ownership qualifiers are reserved for the
-implementation. A program may not assume that they are or are not
-implemented with macros, or what those macros expand to.</p>
-
-<p>An ownership qualifier may be written anywhere that any other type
-qualifier may be written.</p>
-
-<p>If an ownership qualifier appears in
-the <i>declaration-specifiers</i>, the following rules apply:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>if the type specifier is a retainable object owner type, the
-qualifier applies to that type;</li>
-<li>if the outermost non-array part of the declarator is a pointer or
-block pointer, the qualifier applies to that type;</li>
-<li>otherwise the program is ill-formed.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>If an ownership qualifier appears on the declarator name, or on the
-declared object, it is applied to outermost pointer or block-pointer
-type.</p>
-
-<p>If an ownership qualifier appears anywhere else in a declarator, it
-applies to the type there.</p>
-
-<div id="ownership.spelling.property">
-<h1>Property declarations</h1>
-
-<p>A property of retainable object pointer type may have ownership.
-If the property's type is ownership-qualified, then the property has
-that ownership. If the property has one of the following modifiers,
-then the property has the corresponding ownership. A property is
-ill-formed if it has conflicting sources of ownership, or if it has
-redundant ownership modifiers, or if it has <tt>__autoreleasing</tt>
-ownership.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><tt>assign</tt> implies <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt> ownership.</li>
-<li><tt>copy</tt> implies <tt>__strong</tt> ownership, as well as the
- usual behavior of copy semantics on the setter.</li>
-<li><tt>retain</tt> implies <tt>__strong</tt> ownership.</li>
-<li><tt>strong</tt> implies <tt>__strong</tt> ownership.</li>
-<li><tt>unsafe_unretained</tt> implies <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt>
- ownership.</li>
-<li><tt>weak</tt> implies <tt>__weak</tt> ownership.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>With the exception of <tt>weak</tt>, these modifiers are available
-in non-ARC modes.</p>
-
-<p>A property's specified ownership is preserved in its metadata, but
-otherwise the meaning is purely conventional unless the property is
-synthesized. If a property is synthesized, then the
-<span class="term">associated instance variable</span> is the
-instance variable which is named, possibly implicitly, by the
-<tt>@synthesize</tt> declaration. If the associated instance variable
-already exists, then its ownership qualification must equal the
-ownership of the property; otherwise, the instance variable is created
-with that ownership qualification.</p>
-
-<p>A property of retainable object pointer type which is synthesized
-without a source of ownership has the ownership of its associated
-instance variable, if it already exists; otherwise,
-<span class="revision"><span class="whenRevised">[beginning Apple 3.1,
-LLVM 3.1]</span> its ownership is implicitly <tt>strong</tt></span>.
-Prior to this revision, it was ill-formed to synthesize such a
-property.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: using <tt>strong</tt> by default
-is safe and consistent with the generic ARC rule about
-<a href="#ownership.inference.variables">inferring ownership</a>. It
-is, unfortunately, inconsistent with the non-ARC rule which states
-that such properties are implicitly <tt>assign</tt>. However, that
-rule is clearly untenable in ARC, since it leads to default-unsafe
-code. The main merit to banning the properties is to avoid confusion
-with non-ARC practice, which did not ultimately strike us as
-sufficient to justify requiring extra syntax and (more importantly)
-forcing novices to understand ownership rules just to declare a
-property when the default is so reasonable. Changing the rule away
-from non-ARC practice was acceptable because we had conservatively
-banned the synthesis in order to give ourselves exactly this
-leeway.</p></div>
-
-<p>Applying <tt>__attribute__((NSObject))</tt> to a property not of
-retainable object pointer type has the same behavior it does outside
-of ARC: it requires the property type to be some sort of pointer and
-permits the use of modifiers other than <tt>assign</tt>. These
-modifiers only affect the synthesized getter and setter; direct
-accesses to the ivar (even if synthesized) still have primitive
-semantics, and the value in the ivar will not be automatically
-released during deallocation.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- ownership.spelling.property -->
-
-</div> <!-- ownership.spelling -->
-
-<div id="ownership.semantics">
-<h1>Semantics</h1>
-
-<p>There are five <span class="term">managed operations</span> which
-may be performed on an object of retainable object pointer type. Each
-qualifier specifies different semantics for each of these operations.
-It is still undefined behavior to access an object outside of its
-lifetime.</p>
-
-<p>A load or store with <q>primitive semantics</q> has the same
-semantics as the respective operation would have on an <tt>void*</tt>
-lvalue with the same alignment and non-ownership qualification.</p>
-
-<p><span class="term">Reading</span> occurs when performing a
-lvalue-to-rvalue conversion on an object lvalue.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>For <tt>__weak</tt> objects, the current pointee is retained and
-then released at the end of the current full-expression. This must
-execute atomically with respect to assignments and to the final
-release of the pointee.</li>
-<li>For all other objects, the lvalue is loaded with primitive
-semantics.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p><span class="term">Assignment</span> occurs when evaluating
-an assignment operator. The semantics vary based on the qualification:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>For <tt>__strong</tt> objects, the new pointee is first retained;
-second, the lvalue is loaded with primitive semantics; third, the new
-pointee is stored into the lvalue with primitive semantics; and
-finally, the old pointee is released. This is not performed
-atomically; external synchronization must be used to make this safe in
-the face of concurrent loads and stores.</li>
-<li>For <tt>__weak</tt> objects, the lvalue is updated to point to the
-new pointee, unless the new pointee is an object currently undergoing
-deallocation, in which case the lvalue is updated to a null pointer.
-This must execute atomically with respect to other assignments to the
-object, to reads from the object, and to the final release of the new
-pointee.</li>
-<li>For <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt> objects, the new pointee is
-stored into the lvalue using primitive semantics.</li>
-<li>For <tt>__autoreleasing</tt> objects, the new pointee is retained,
-autoreleased, and stored into the lvalue using primitive semantics.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p><span class="term">Initialization</span> occurs when an object's
-lifetime begins, which depends on its storage duration.
-Initialization proceeds in two stages:</p>
-<ol>
-<li>First, a null pointer is stored into the lvalue using primitive
-semantics. This step is skipped if the object
-is <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt>.</li>
-<li>Second, if the object has an initializer, that expression is
-evaluated and then assigned into the object using the usual assignment
-semantics.</li>
-</ol>
-
-<p><span class="term">Destruction</span> occurs when an object's
-lifetime ends. In all cases it is semantically equivalent to
-assigning a null pointer to the object, with the proviso that of
-course the object cannot be legally read after the object's lifetime
-ends.</p>
-
-<p><span class="term">Moving</span> occurs in specific situations
-where an lvalue is <q>moved from</q>, meaning that its current pointee
-will be used but the object may be left in a different (but still
-valid) state. This arises with <tt>__block</tt> variables and rvalue
-references in C++. For <tt>__strong</tt> lvalues, moving is equivalent
-to loading the lvalue with primitive semantics, writing a null pointer
-to it with primitive semantics, and then releasing the result of the
-load at the end of the current full-expression. For all other
-lvalues, moving is equivalent to reading the object.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- ownership.semantics -->
-
-<div id="ownership.restrictions">
-<h1>Restrictions</h1>
-
-<div id="ownership.restrictions.weak">
-<h1>Weak-unavailable types</h1>
-
-<p>It is explicitly permitted for Objective-C classes to not
-support <tt>__weak</tt> references. It is undefined behavior to
-perform an operation with weak assignment semantics with a pointer to
-an Objective-C object whose class does not support <tt>__weak</tt>
-references.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: historically, it has been
-possible for a class to provide its own reference-count implementation
-by overriding <tt>retain</tt>, <tt>release</tt>, etc. However, weak
-references to an object require coordination with its class's
-reference-count implementation because, among other things, weak loads
-and stores must be atomic with respect to the final release.
-Therefore, existing custom reference-count implementations will
-generally not support weak references without additional effort. This
-is unavoidable without breaking binary compatibility.</p></div>
-
-<p>A class may indicate that it does not support weak references by
-providing the <tt>objc_arc_weak_unavailable</tt> attribute on the
-class's interface declaration. A retainable object pointer type
-is <span class="term">weak-unavailable</span> if is a pointer to an
-(optionally protocol-qualified) Objective-C class <tt>T</tt>
-where <tt>T</tt> or one of its superclasses has
-the <tt>objc_arc_weak_unavailable</tt> attribute. A program is
-ill-formed if it applies the <tt>__weak</tt> ownership qualifier to a
-weak-unavailable type or if the value operand of a weak assignment
-operation has a weak-unavailable type.</p>
-</div> <!-- ownership.restrictions.weak -->
-
-<div id="ownership.restrictions.autoreleasing">
-<h1>Storage duration of <tt>__autoreleasing</tt> objects</h1>
-
-<p>A program is ill-formed if it declares an <tt>__autoreleasing</tt>
-object of non-automatic storage duration. A program is ill-formed
-if it captures an <tt>__autoreleasing</tt> object in a block or,
-unless by reference, in a C++11 lambda.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: autorelease pools are tied to the
-current thread and scope by their nature. While it is possible to
-have temporary objects whose instance variables are filled with
-autoreleased objects, there is no way that ARC can provide any sort of
-safety guarantee there.</p></div>
-
-<p>It is undefined behavior if a non-null pointer is assigned to
-an <tt>__autoreleasing</tt> object while an autorelease pool is in
-scope and then that object is read after the autorelease pool's scope
-is left.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id="ownership.restrictions.conversion.indirect">
-<h1>Conversion of pointers to ownership-qualified types</h1>
-
-<p>A program is ill-formed if an expression of type <tt>T*</tt> is
-converted, explicitly or implicitly, to the type <tt>U*</tt>,
-where <tt>T</tt> and <tt>U</tt> have different ownership
-qualification, unless:</p>
-<ul>
-<li><tt>T</tt> is qualified with <tt>__strong</tt>,
- <tt>__autoreleasing</tt>, or <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt>, and
- <tt>U</tt> is qualified with both <tt>const</tt> and
- <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt>; or</li>
-<li>either <tt>T</tt> or <tt>U</tt> is <tt>cv void</tt>, where
-<tt>cv</tt> is an optional sequence of non-ownership qualifiers; or</li>
-<li>the conversion is requested with a <tt>reinterpret_cast</tt> in
- Objective-C++; or</li>
-<li>the conversion is a
-well-formed <a href="#ownership.restrictions.pass_by_writeback">pass-by-writeback</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The analogous rule applies to <tt>T&amp;</tt> and <tt>U&amp;</tt> in
-Objective-C++.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: these rules provide a reasonable
-level of type-safety for indirect pointers, as long as the underlying
-memory is not deallocated. The conversion to <tt>const
-__unsafe_unretained</tt> is permitted because the semantics of reads
-are equivalent across all these ownership semantics, and that's a very
-useful and common pattern. The interconversion with <tt>void*</tt> is
-useful for allocating memory or otherwise escaping the type system,
-but use it carefully. <tt>reinterpret_cast</tt> is considered to be
-an obvious enough sign of taking responsibility for any
-problems.</p></div>
-
-<p>It is undefined behavior to access an ownership-qualified object
-through an lvalue of a differently-qualified type, except that any
-non-<tt>__weak</tt> object may be read through
-an <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt> lvalue.</p>
-
-<p>It is undefined behavior if a managed operation is performed on
-a <tt>__strong</tt> or <tt>__weak</tt> object without a guarantee that
-it contains a primitive zero bit-pattern, or if the storage for such
-an object is freed or reused without the object being first assigned a
-null pointer.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: ARC cannot differentiate between
-an assignment operator which is intended to <q>initialize</q> dynamic
-memory and one which is intended to potentially replace a value.
-Therefore the object's pointer must be valid before letting ARC at it.
-Similarly, C and Objective-C do not provide any language hooks for
-destroying objects held in dynamic memory, so it is the programmer's
-responsibility to avoid leaks (<tt>__strong</tt> objects) and
-consistency errors (<tt>__weak</tt> objects).</p>
-
-<p>These requirements are followed automatically in Objective-C++ when
-creating objects of retainable object owner type with <tt>new</tt>
-or <tt>new[]</tt> and destroying them with <tt>delete</tt>,
-<tt>delete[]</tt>, or a pseudo-destructor expression. Note that
-arrays of nontrivially-ownership-qualified type are not ABI compatible
-with non-ARC code because the element type is non-POD: such arrays
-that are <tt>new[]</tt>'d in ARC translation units cannot
-be <tt>delete[]</tt>'d in non-ARC translation units and
-vice-versa.</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id="ownership.restrictions.pass_by_writeback">
-<h1>Passing to an out parameter by writeback</h1>
-
-<p>If the argument passed to a parameter of type
-<tt>T __autoreleasing *</tt> has type <tt>U oq *</tt>,
-where <tt>oq</tt> is an ownership qualifier, then the argument is a
-candidate for <span class="term">pass-by-writeback</span> if:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><tt>oq</tt> is <tt>__strong</tt> or <tt>__weak</tt>, and</li>
-<li>it would be legal to initialize a <tt>T __strong *</tt> with
-a <tt>U __strong *</tt>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>For purposes of overload resolution, an implicit conversion
-sequence requiring a pass-by-writeback is always worse than an
-implicit conversion sequence not requiring a pass-by-writeback.</p>
-
-<p>The pass-by-writeback is ill-formed if the argument expression does
-not have a legal form:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><tt>&amp;var</tt>, where <tt>var</tt> is a scalar variable of
-automatic storage duration with retainable object pointer type</li>
-<li>a conditional expression where the second and third operands are
-both legal forms</li>
-<li>a cast whose operand is a legal form</li>
-<li>a null pointer constant</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: the restriction in the form of
-the argument serves two purposes. First, it makes it impossible to
-pass the address of an array to the argument, which serves to protect
-against an otherwise serious risk of mis-inferring an <q>array</q>
-argument as an out-parameter. Second, it makes it much less likely
-that the user will see confusing aliasing problems due to the
-implementation, below, where their store to the writeback temporary is
-not immediately seen in the original argument variable.</p></div>
-
-<p>A pass-by-writeback is evaluated as follows:</p>
-<ol>
-<li>The argument is evaluated to yield a pointer <tt>p</tt> of
- type <tt>U oq *</tt>.</li>
-<li>If <tt>p</tt> is a null pointer, then a null pointer is passed as
- the argument, and no further work is required for the pass-by-writeback.</li>
-<li>Otherwise, a temporary of type <tt>T __autoreleasing</tt> is
- created and initialized to a null pointer.</li>
-<li>If the parameter is not an Objective-C method parameter marked
- <tt>out</tt>, then <tt>*p</tt> is read, and the result is written
- into the temporary with primitive semantics.</li>
-<li>The address of the temporary is passed as the argument to the
- actual call.</li>
-<li>After the call completes, the temporary is loaded with primitive
- semantics, and that value is assigned into <tt>*p</tt>.</li>
-</ol>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: this is all admittedly
-convoluted. In an ideal world, we would see that a local variable is
-being passed to an out-parameter and retroactively modify its type to
-be <tt>__autoreleasing</tt> rather than <tt>__strong</tt>. This would
-be remarkably difficult and not always well-founded under the C type
-system. However, it was judged unacceptably invasive to require
-programmers to write <tt>__autoreleasing</tt> on all the variables
-they intend to use for out-parameters. This was the least bad
-solution.</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id="ownership.restrictions.records">
-<h1>Ownership-qualified fields of structs and unions</h1>
-
-<p>A program is ill-formed if it declares a member of a C struct or
-union to have a nontrivially ownership-qualified type.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: the resulting type would be
-non-POD in the C++ sense, but C does not give us very good language
-tools for managing the lifetime of aggregates, so it is more
-convenient to simply forbid them. It is still possible to manage this
-with a <tt>void*</tt> or an <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt>
-object.</p></div>
-
-<p>This restriction does not apply in Objective-C++. However,
-nontrivally ownership-qualified types are considered non-POD: in C++11
-terms, they are not trivially default constructible, copy
-constructible, move constructible, copy assignable, move assignable,
-or destructible. It is a violation of C++'s One Definition Rule to use
-a class outside of ARC that, under ARC, would have a nontrivially
-ownership-qualified member.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: unlike in C, we can express all
-the necessary ARC semantics for ownership-qualified subobjects as
-suboperations of the (default) special member functions for the class.
-These functions then become non-trivial. This has the non-obvious
-result that the class will have a non-trivial copy constructor and
-non-trivial destructor; if this would not normally be true outside of
-ARC, objects of the type will be passed and returned in an
-ABI-incompatible manner.</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id="ownership.inference">
-<h1>Ownership inference</h1>
-
-<div id="ownership.inference.variables">
-<h1>Objects</h1>
-
-<p>If an object is declared with retainable object owner type, but
-without an explicit ownership qualifier, its type is implicitly
-adjusted to have <tt>__strong</tt> qualification.</p>
-
-<p>As a special case, if the object's base type is <tt>Class</tt>
-(possibly protocol-qualified), the type is adjusted to
-have <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt> qualification instead.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id="ownership.inference.indirect_parameters">
-<h1>Indirect parameters</h1>
-
-<p>If a function or method parameter has type <tt>T*</tt>, where
-<tt>T</tt> is an ownership-unqualified retainable object pointer type,
-then:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>if <tt>T</tt> is <tt>const</tt>-qualified or <tt>Class</tt>, then
-it is implicitly qualified with <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt>;</li>
-<li>otherwise, it is implicitly qualified
-with <tt>__autoreleasing</tt>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: <tt>__autoreleasing</tt> exists
-mostly for this case, the Cocoa convention for out-parameters. Since
-a pointer to <tt>const</tt> is obviously not an out-parameter, we
-instead use a type more useful for passing arrays. If the user
-instead intends to pass in a <em>mutable</em> array, inferring
-<tt>__autoreleasing</tt> is the wrong thing to do; this directs some
-of the caution in the following rules about writeback.</p></div>
-
-<p>Such a type written anywhere else would be ill-formed by the
-general rule requiring ownership qualifiers.</p>
-
-<p>This rule does not apply in Objective-C++ if a parameter's type is
-dependent in a template pattern and is only <em>instantiated</em> to
-a type which would be a pointer to an unqualified retainable object
-pointer type. Such code is still ill-formed.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: the convention is very unlikely
-to be intentional in template code.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- ownership.inference.indirect_parameters -->
-
-<div id="ownership.inference.template_arguments">
-<h1>Template arguments</h1>
-
-<p>If a template argument for a template type parameter is an
-retainable object owner type that does not have an explicit ownership
-qualifier, it is adjusted to have <tt>__strong</tt>
-qualification. This adjustment occurs regardless of whether the
-template argument was deduced or explicitly specified. </p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: <tt>__strong</tt> is a useful default for containers (e.g., <tt>std::vector&lt;id&gt;</tt>), which would otherwise require explicit qualification. Moreover, unqualified retainable object pointer types are unlikely to be useful within templates, since they generally need to have a qualifier applied to the before being used.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- ownership.inference.template_arguments -->
-</div> <!-- ownership.inference -->
-</div> <!-- ownership -->
-
-
-<div id="family">
-<h1>Method families</h1>
-
-<p>An Objective-C method may fall into a <span class="term">method
-family</span>, which is a conventional set of behaviors ascribed to it
-by the Cocoa conventions.</p>
-
-<p>A method is in a certain method family if:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>it has a <tt>objc_method_family</tt> attribute placing it in that
- family; or if not that,</li>
-<li>it does not have an <tt>objc_method_family</tt> attribute placing
- it in a different or no family, and</li>
-<li>its selector falls into the corresponding selector family, and</li>
-<li>its signature obeys the added restrictions of the method family.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>A selector is in a certain selector family if, ignoring any leading
-underscores, the first component of the selector either consists
-entirely of the name of the method family or it begins with that name
-followed by a character other than a lowercase letter. For
-example, <tt>_perform:with:</tt> and <tt>performWith:</tt> would fall
-into the <tt>perform</tt> family (if we recognized one),
-but <tt>performing:with</tt> would not.</p>
-
-<p>The families and their added restrictions are:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><tt>alloc</tt> methods must return a retainable object pointer type.</li>
-<li><tt>copy</tt> methods must return a retainable object pointer type.</li>
-<li><tt>mutableCopy</tt> methods must return a retainable object pointer type.</li>
-<li><tt>new</tt> methods must return a retainable object pointer type.</li>
-<li><tt>init</tt> methods must be instance methods and must return an
-Objective-C pointer type. Additionally, a program is ill-formed if it
-declares or contains a call to an <tt>init</tt> method whose return
-type is neither <tt>id</tt> nor a pointer to a super-class or
-sub-class of the declaring class (if the method was declared on
-a class) or the static receiver type of the call (if it was declared
-on a protocol).
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: there are a fair number of existing
-methods with <tt>init</tt>-like selectors which nonetheless don't
-follow the <tt>init</tt> conventions. Typically these are either
-accidental naming collisions or helper methods called during
-initialization. Because of the peculiar retain/release behavior
-of <tt>init</tt> methods, it's very important not to treat these
-methods as <tt>init</tt> methods if they aren't meant to be. It was
-felt that implicitly defining these methods out of the family based on
-the exact relationship between the return type and the declaring class
-would be much too subtle and fragile. Therefore we identify a small
-number of legitimate-seeming return types and call everything else an
-error. This serves the secondary purpose of encouraging programmers
-not to accidentally give methods names in the <tt>init</tt> family.</p>
-
-<p>Note that a method with an <tt>init</tt>-family selector which
-returns a non-Objective-C type (e.g. <tt>void</tt>) is perfectly
-well-formed; it simply isn't in the <tt>init</tt> family.</p></div>
-</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>A program is ill-formed if a method's declarations,
-implementations, and overrides do not all have the same method
-family.</p>
-
-<div id="family.attribute">
-<h1>Explicit method family control</h1>
-
-<p>A method may be annotated with the <tt>objc_method_family</tt>
-attribute to precisely control which method family it belongs to. If
-a method in an <tt>@implementation</tt> does not have this attribute,
-but there is a method declared in the corresponding <tt>@interface</tt>
-that does, then the attribute is copied to the declaration in the
-<tt>@implementation</tt>. The attribute is available outside of ARC,
-and may be tested for with the preprocessor query
-<tt>__has_attribute(objc_method_family)</tt>.</p>
-
-<p>The attribute is spelled
-<tt>__attribute__((objc_method_family(<i>family</i>)))</tt>.
-If <i>family</i> is <tt>none</tt>, the method has no family, even if
-it would otherwise be considered to have one based on its selector and
-type. Otherwise, <i>family</i> must be one
-of <tt>alloc</tt>, <tt>copy</tt>, <tt>init</tt>,
-<tt>mutableCopy</tt>, or <tt>new</tt>, in which case the method is
-considered to belong to the corresponding family regardless of its
-selector. It is an error if a method that is explicitly added to a
-family in this way does not meet the requirements of the family other
-than the selector naming convention.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: the rules codified in this document
-describe the standard conventions of Objective-C. However, as these
-conventions have not heretofore been enforced by an unforgiving
-mechanical system, they are only imperfectly kept, especially as they
-haven't always even been precisely defined. While it is possible to
-define low-level ownership semantics with attributes like
-<tt>ns_returns_retained</tt>, this attribute allows the user to
-communicate semantic intent, which is of use both to ARC (which, e.g.,
-treats calls to <tt>init</tt> specially) and the static analyzer.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div id="family.semantics">
-<h1>Semantics of method families</h1>
-
-<p>A method's membership in a method family may imply non-standard
-semantics for its parameters and return type.</p>
-
-<p>Methods in the <tt>alloc</tt>, <tt>copy</tt>, <tt>mutableCopy</tt>,
-and <tt>new</tt> families &mdash; that is, methods in all the
-currently-defined families except <tt>init</tt> &mdash; implicitly
-<a href="#objects.operands.retained_returns">return a retained
-object</a> as if they were annotated with
-the <tt>ns_returns_retained</tt> attribute. This can be overridden by
-annotating the method with either of
-the <tt>ns_returns_autoreleased</tt> or
-<tt>ns_returns_not_retained</tt> attributes.</p>
-
-<p>Properties also follow same naming rules as methods. This means that
-those in the <tt>alloc</tt>, <tt>copy</tt>, <tt>mutableCopy</tt>,
-and <tt>new</tt> families provide access to
-<a href="#objects.operands.retained_returns">retained objects</a>.
-This can be overridden by annotating the property with
-<tt>ns_returns_not_retained</tt> attribute.</p>
-
-<div id="family.semantics.init">
-<h1>Semantics of <tt>init</tt></h1>
-<p>Methods in the <tt>init</tt> family implicitly
-<a href="#objects.operands.consumed">consume</a> their <tt>self</tt>
-parameter and <a href="#objects.operands.retained_returns">return a
-retained object</a>. Neither of these properties can be altered
-through attributes.</p>
-
-<p>A call to an <tt>init</tt> method with a receiver that is either
-<tt>self</tt> (possibly parenthesized or casted) or <tt>super</tt> is
-called a <span class="term">delegate init call</span>. It is an error
-for a delegate init call to be made except from an <tt>init</tt>
-method, and excluding blocks within such methods.</p>
-
-<p>As an exception to the <a href="misc.self">usual rule</a>, the
-variable <tt>self</tt> is mutable in an <tt>init</tt> method and has
-the usual semantics for a <tt>__strong</tt> variable. However, it is
-undefined behavior and the program is ill-formed, no diagnostic
-required, if an <tt>init</tt> method attempts to use the previous
-value of <tt>self</tt> after the completion of a delegate init call.
-It is conventional, but not required, for an <tt>init</tt> method to
-return <tt>self</tt>.</p>
-
-<p>It is undefined behavior for a program to cause two or more calls
-to <tt>init</tt> methods on the same object, except that
-each <tt>init</tt> method invocation may perform at most one delegate
-init call.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- family.semantics.init -->
-
-<div id="family.semantics.result_type">
-<h1>Related result types</h1>
-
-<p>Certain methods are candidates to have <span class="term">related
-result types</span>:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>class methods in the <tt>alloc</tt> and <tt>new</tt> method families</li>
-<li>instance methods in the <tt>init</tt> family</li>
-<li>the instance method <tt>self</tt></li>
-<li>outside of ARC, the instance methods <tt>retain</tt> and <tt>autorelease</tt></li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>If the formal result type of such a method is <tt>id</tt> or
-protocol-qualified <tt>id</tt>, or a type equal to the declaring class
-or a superclass, then it is said to have a related result type. In
-this case, when invoked in an explicit message send, it is assumed to
-return a type related to the type of the receiver:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>if it is a class method, and the receiver is a class
-name <tt>T</tt>, the message send expression has type <tt>T*</tt>;
-otherwise</li>
-<li>if it is an instance method, and the receiver has type <tt>T</tt>,
-the message send expression has type <tt>T</tt>; otherwise</li>
-<li>the message send expression has the normal result type of the
-method.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>This is a new rule of the Objective-C language and applies outside
-of ARC.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: ARC's automatic code emission is
-more prone than most code to signature errors, i.e. errors where a
-call was emitted against one method signature, but the implementing
-method has an incompatible signature. Having more precise type
-information helps drastically lower this risk, as well as catching
-a number of latent bugs.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- family.semantics.result_type -->
-</div> <!-- family.semantics -->
-</div> <!-- family -->
-
-<div id="optimization">
-<h1>Optimization</h1>
-
-<p>ARC applies aggressive rules for the optimization of local
-behavior. These rules are based around a core assumption of
-<span class="term">local balancing</span>: that other code will
-perform retains and releases as necessary (and only as necessary) for
-its own safety, and so the optimizer does not need to consider global
-properties of the retain and release sequence. For example, if a
-retain and release immediately bracket a call, the optimizer can
-delete the retain and release on the assumption that the called
-function will not do a constant number of unmotivated releases
-followed by a constant number of <q>balancing</q> retains, such that
-the local retain/release pair is the only thing preventing the called
-function from ending up with a dangling reference.</p>
-
-<p>The optimizer assumes that when a new value enters local control,
-e.g. from a load of a non-local object or as the result of a function
-call, it is instaneously valid. Subsequently, a retain and release of
-a value are necessary on a computation path only if there is a use of
-that value before the release and after any operation which might
-cause a release of the value (including indirectly or non-locally),
-and only if the value is not demonstrably already retained.</p>
-
-<p>The complete optimization rules are quite complicated, but it would
-still be useful to document them here.</p>
-
-<div id="optimization.precise">
-<h1>Precise lifetime semantics</h1>
-
-<p>In general, ARC maintains an invariant that a retainable object
-pointer held in a <tt>__strong</tt> object will be retained for the
-full formal lifetime of the object. Objects subject to this invariant
-have <span class="term">precise lifetime semantics</span>.</p>
-
-<p>By default, local variables of automatic storage duration do not
-have precise lifetime semantics. Such objects are simply strong
-references which hold values of retainable object pointer type, and
-these values are still fully subject to the optimizations on values
-under local control.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: applying these precise-lifetime
-semantics strictly would be prohibitive. Many useful optimizations
-that might theoretically decrease the lifetime of an object would be
-rendered impossible. Essentially, it promises too much.</p></div>
-
-<p>A local variable of retainable object owner type and automatic
-storage duration may be annotated with the <tt>objc_precise_lifetime</tt>
-attribute to indicate that it should be considered to be an object
-with precise lifetime semantics.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: nonetheless, it is sometimes
-useful to be able to force an object to be released at a precise time,
-even if that object does not appear to be used. This is likely to be
-uncommon enough that the syntactic weight of explicitly requesting
-these semantics will not be burdensome, and may even make the code
-clearer.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- optimization.precise -->
-
-</div> <!-- optimization -->
-
-<div id="misc">
-<h1>Miscellaneous</h1>
-
-<div id="misc.special_methods">
-<h1>Special methods</h1>
-
-<div id="misc.special_methods.retain">
-<h1>Memory management methods</h1>
-
-<p>A program is ill-formed if it contains a method definition, message
-send, or <tt>@selector</tt> expression for any of the following
-selectors:</p>
-<ul>
-<li><tt>autorelease</tt></li>
-<li><tt>release</tt></li>
-<li><tt>retain</tt></li>
-<li><tt>retainCount</tt></li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: <tt>retainCount</tt> is banned
-because ARC robs it of consistent semantics. The others were banned
-after weighing three options for how to deal with message sends:</p>
-
-<p><b>Honoring</b> them would work out very poorly if a programmer
-naively or accidentally tried to incorporate code written for manual
-retain/release code into an ARC program. At best, such code would do
-twice as much work as necessary; quite frequently, however, ARC and
-the explicit code would both try to balance the same retain, leading
-to crashes. The cost is losing the ability to perform <q>unrooted</q>
-retains, i.e. retains not logically corresponding to a strong
-reference in the object graph.</p>
-
-<p><b>Ignoring</b> them would badly violate user expectations about their
-code. While it <em>would</em> make it easier to develop code simultaneously
-for ARC and non-ARC, there is very little reason to do so except for
-certain library developers. ARC and non-ARC translation units share
-an execution model and can seamlessly interoperate. Within a
-translation unit, a developer who faithfully maintains their code in
-non-ARC mode is suffering all the restrictions of ARC for zero
-benefit, while a developer who isn't testing the non-ARC mode is
-likely to be unpleasantly surprised if they try to go back to it.</p>
-
-<p><b>Banning</b> them has the disadvantage of making it very awkward
-to migrate existing code to ARC. The best answer to that, given a
-number of other changes and restrictions in ARC, is to provide a
-specialized tool to assist users in that migration.</p>
-
-<p>Implementing these methods was banned because they are too integral
-to the semantics of ARC; many tricks which worked tolerably under
-manual reference counting will misbehave if ARC performs an ephemeral
-extra retain or two. If absolutely required, it is still possible to
-implement them in non-ARC code, for example in a category; the
-implementations must obey the <a href="#objects.retains">semantics</a>
-laid out elsewhere in this document.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div> <!-- misc.special_methods.retain -->
-
-<div id="misc.special_methods.dealloc">
-<h1><tt>dealloc</tt></h1>
-
-<p>A program is ill-formed if it contains a message send
-or <tt>@selector</tt> expression for the selector <tt>dealloc</tt>.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: there are no legitimate reasons
-to call <tt>dealloc</tt> directly.</p></div>
-
-<p>A class may provide a method definition for an instance method
-named <tt>dealloc</tt>. This method will be called after the final
-<tt>release</tt> of the object but before it is deallocated or any of
-its instance variables are destroyed. The superclass's implementation
-of <tt>dealloc</tt> will be called automatically when the method
-returns.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: even though ARC destroys instance
-variables automatically, there are still legitimate reasons to write
-a <tt>dealloc</tt> method, such as freeing non-retainable resources.
-Failing to call <tt>[super&nbsp;dealloc]</tt> in such a method is nearly
-always a bug. Sometimes, the object is simply trying to prevent
-itself from being destroyed, but <tt>dealloc</tt> is really far too
-late for the object to be raising such objections. Somewhat more
-legitimately, an object may have been pool-allocated and should not be
-deallocated with <tt>free</tt>; for now, this can only be supported
-with a <tt>dealloc</tt> implementation outside of ARC. Such an
-implementation must be very careful to do all the other work
-that <tt>NSObject</tt>'s <tt>dealloc</tt> would, which is outside the
-scope of this document to describe.</p></div>
-
-<p>The instance variables for an ARC-compiled class will be destroyed
-at some point after control enters the <tt>dealloc</tt> method for the
-root class of the class. The ordering of the destruction of instance
-variables is unspecified, both within a single class and between
-subclasses and superclasses.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: the traditional, non-ARC pattern
-for destroying instance variables is to destroy them immediately
-before calling <tt>[super&nbsp;dealloc]</tt>. Unfortunately, message
-sends from the superclass are quite capable of reaching methods in the
-subclass, and those methods may well read or write to those instance
-variables. Making such message sends from dealloc is generally
-discouraged, since the subclass may well rely on other invariants that
-were broken during <tt>dealloc</tt>, but it's not so inescapably
-dangerous that we felt comfortable calling it undefined behavior.
-Therefore we chose to delay destroying the instance variables to a
-point at which message sends are clearly disallowed: the point at
-which the root class's deallocation routines take over.</p>
-
-<p>In most code, the difference is not observable. It can, however,
-be observed if an instance variable holds a strong reference to an
-object whose deallocation will trigger a side-effect which must be
-carefully ordered with respect to the destruction of the super class.
-Such code violates the design principle that semantically important
-behavior should be explicit. A simple fix is to clear the instance
-variable manually during <tt>dealloc</tt>; a more holistic solution is
-to move semantically important side-effects out of
-<tt>dealloc</tt> and into a separate teardown phase which can rely on
-working with well-formed objects.</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-</div> <!-- misc.special_methods -->
-
-<div id="autoreleasepool">
-<h1><tt>@autoreleasepool</tt></h1>
-
-<p>To simplify the use of autorelease pools, and to bring them under
-the control of the compiler, a new kind of statement is available in
-Objective-C. It is written <tt>@autoreleasepool</tt> followed by
-a <i>compound-statement</i>, i.e. by a new scope delimited by curly
-braces. Upon entry to this block, the current state of the
-autorelease pool is captured. When the block is exited normally,
-whether by fallthrough or directed control flow (such
-as <tt>return</tt> or <tt>break</tt>), the autorelease pool is
-restored to the saved state, releasing all the objects in it. When
-the block is exited with an exception, the pool is not drained.</p>
-
-<p><tt>@autoreleasepool</tt> may be used in non-ARC translation units,
-with equivalent semantics.</p>
-
-<p>A program is ill-formed if it refers to the
-<tt>NSAutoreleasePool</tt> class.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: autorelease pools are clearly
-important for the compiler to reason about, but it is far too much to
-expect the compiler to accurately reason about control dependencies
-between two calls. It is also very easy to accidentally forget to
-drain an autorelease pool when using the manual API, and this can
-significantly inflate the process's high-water-mark. The introduction
-of a new scope is unfortunate but basically required for sane
-interaction with the rest of the language. Not draining the pool
-during an unwind is apparently required by the Objective-C exceptions
-implementation.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- autoreleasepool -->
-
-<div id="misc.self">
-<h1><tt>self</tt></h1>
-
-<p>The <tt>self</tt> parameter variable of an Objective-C method is
-never actually retained by the implementation. It is undefined
-behavior, or at least dangerous, to cause an object to be deallocated
-during a message send to that object.</p>
-
-<p>To make this safe, for Objective-C instance methods <tt>self</tt> is
-implicitly <tt>const</tt> unless the method is in the <a
-href="#family.semantics.init"><tt>init</tt> family</a>. Further, <tt>self</tt>
-is <b>always</b> implicitly <tt>const</tt> within a class method.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: the cost of
-retaining <tt>self</tt> in all methods was found to be prohibitive, as
-it tends to be live across calls, preventing the optimizer from
-proving that the retain and release are unnecessary &mdash; for good
-reason, as it's quite possible in theory to cause an object to be
-deallocated during its execution without this retain and release.
-Since it's extremely uncommon to actually do so, even unintentionally,
-and since there's no natural way for the programmer to remove this
-retain/release pair otherwise (as there is for other parameters by,
-say, making the variable <tt>__unsafe_unretained</tt>), we chose to
-make this optimizing assumption and shift some amount of risk to the
-user.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- misc.self -->
-
-<div id="misc.enumeration">
-<h1>Fast enumeration iteration variables</h1>
-
-<p>If a variable is declared in the condition of an Objective-C fast
-enumeration loop, and the variable has no explicit ownership
-qualifier, then it is qualified with <tt>const __strong</tt> and
-objects encountered during the enumeration are not actually
-retained.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: this is an optimization made
-possible because fast enumeration loops promise to keep the objects
-retained during enumeration, and the collection itself cannot be
-synchronously modified. It can be overridden by explicitly qualifying
-the variable with <tt>__strong</tt>, which will make the variable
-mutable again and cause the loop to retain the objects it
-encounters.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- misc.enumeration -->
-
-<div id="misc.blocks">
-<h1>Blocks</h1>
-
-<p>The implicit <tt>const</tt> capture variables created when
-evaluating a block literal expression have the same ownership
-semantics as the local variables they capture. The capture is
-performed by reading from the captured variable and initializing the
-capture variable with that value; the capture variable is destroyed
-when the block literal is, i.e. at the end of the enclosing scope.</p>
-
-<p>The <a href="#ownership.inference">inference</a> rules apply
-equally to <tt>__block</tt> variables, which is a shift in semantics
-from non-ARC, where <tt>__block</tt> variables did not implicitly
-retain during capture.</p>
-
-<p><tt>__block</tt> variables of retainable object owner type are
-moved off the stack by initializing the heap copy with the result of
-moving from the stack copy.</p>
-
-<p>With the exception of retains done as part of initializing
-a <tt>__strong</tt> parameter variable or reading a <tt>__weak</tt>
-variable, whenever these semantics call for retaining a value of
-block-pointer type, it has the effect of a <tt>Block_copy</tt>. The
-optimizer may remove such copies when it sees that the result is
-used only as an argument to a call.</p>
-
-</div> <!-- misc.blocks -->
-
-<div id="misc.exceptions">
-<h1>Exceptions</h1>
-
-<p>By default in Objective C, ARC is not exception-safe for normal
-releases:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>It does not end the lifetime of <tt>__strong</tt> variables when
-their scopes are abnormally terminated by an exception.</li>
-<li>It does not perform releases which would occur at the end of
-a full-expression if that full-expression throws an exception.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>A program may be compiled with the option
-<tt>-fobjc-arc-exceptions</tt> in order to enable these, or with the
-option <tt>-fno-objc-arc-exceptions</tt> to explicitly disable them,
-with the last such argument <q>winning</q>.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: the standard Cocoa convention is
-that exceptions signal programmer error and are not intended to be
-recovered from. Making code exceptions-safe by default would impose
-severe runtime and code size penalties on code that typically does not
-actually care about exceptions safety. Therefore, ARC-generated code
-leaks by default on exceptions, which is just fine if the process is
-going to be immediately terminated anyway. Programs which do care
-about recovering from exceptions should enable the option.</p></div>
-
-<p>In Objective-C++, <tt>-fobjc-arc-exceptions</tt> is enabled by
-default.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: C++ already introduces pervasive
-exceptions-cleanup code of the sort that ARC introduces. C++
-programmers who have not already disabled exceptions are much more
-likely to actual require exception-safety.</p></div>
-
-<p>ARC does end the lifetimes of <tt>__weak</tt> objects when an
-exception terminates their scope unless exceptions are disabled in the
-compiler.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: the consequence of a
-local <tt>__weak</tt> object not being destroyed is very likely to be
-corruption of the Objective-C runtime, so we want to be safer here.
-Of course, potentially massive leaks are about as likely to take down
-the process as this corruption is if the program does try to recover
-from exceptions.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- misc.exceptions -->
-
-<div id="misc.interior">
-<h1>Interior pointers</h1>
-
-<p>An Objective-C method returning a non-retainable pointer may be
-annotated with the <tt>objc_returns_inner_pointer</tt> attribute to
-indicate that it returns a handle to the internal data of an object,
-and that this reference will be invalidated if the object is
-destroyed. When such a message is sent to an object, the object's
-lifetime will be extended until at least the earliest of:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>the last use of the returned pointer, or any pointer derived from
-it, in the calling function or</li>
-<li>the autorelease pool is restored to a previous state.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: not all memory and resources are
-managed with reference counts; it is common for objects to manage
-private resources in their own, private way. Typically these
-resources are completely encapsulated within the object, but some
-classes offer their users direct access for efficiency. If ARC is not
-aware of methods that return such <q>interior</q> pointers, its
-optimizations can cause the owning object to be reclaimed too soon.
-This attribute informs ARC that it must tread lightly.</p>
-
-<p>The extension rules are somewhat intentionally vague. The
-autorelease pool limit is there to permit a simple implementation to
-simply retain and autorelease the receiver. The other limit permits
-some amount of optimization. The phrase <q>derived from</q> is
-intended to encompass the results both of pointer transformations,
-such as casts and arithmetic, and of loading from such derived
-pointers; furthermore, it applies whether or not such derivations are
-applied directly in the calling code or by other utility code (for
-example, the C library routine <tt>strchr</tt>). However, the
-implementation never need account for uses after a return from the
-code which calls the method returning an interior pointer.</p></div>
-
-<p>As an exception, no extension is required if the receiver is loaded
-directly from a <tt>__strong</tt> object
-with <a href="#optimization.precise">precise lifetime semantics</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: implicit autoreleases carry the
-risk of significantly inflating memory use, so it's important to
-provide users a way of avoiding these autoreleases. Tying this to
-precise lifetime semantics is ideal, as for local variables this
-requires a very explicit annotation, which allows ARC to trust the
-user with good cheer.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- misc.interior -->
-
-<div id="misc.c-retainable">
-<h1>C retainable pointer types</h1>
-
-<p>A type is a <span class="term">C retainable pointer type</span>
-if it is a pointer to (possibly qualified) <tt>void</tt> or a
-pointer to a (possibly qualifier) <tt>struct</tt> or <tt>class</tt>
-type.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: ARC does not manage pointers of
-CoreFoundation type (or any of the related families of retainable C
-pointers which interoperate with Objective-C for retain/release
-operation). In fact, ARC does not even know how to distinguish these
-types from arbitrary C pointer types. The intent of this concept is
-to filter out some obviously non-object types while leaving a hook for
-later tightening if a means of exhaustively marking CF types is made
-available.</p></div>
-
-<div id="misc.c-retainable.audit">
-<h1>Auditing of C retainable pointer interfaces</h1>
-
-<p><span class="revision"><span class="whenRevised">[beginning Apple 4.0, LLVM 3.1]</span></span></p>
-
-<p>A C function may be marked with the <tt>cf_audited_transfer</tt>
-attribute to express that, except as otherwise marked with attributes,
-it obeys the parameter (consuming vs. non-consuming) and return
-(retained vs. non-retained) conventions for a C function of its name,
-namely:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>A parameter of C retainable pointer type is assumed to not be
-consumed unless it is marked with the <tt>cf_consumed</tt> attribute, and</li>
-<li>A result of C retainable pointer type is assumed to not be
-returned retained unless the function is either
-marked <tt>cf_returns_retained</tt> or it follows
-the create/copy naming convention and is not
-marked <tt>cf_returns_not_retained</tt>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>A function obeys the <span class="term">create/copy</span> naming
-convention if its name contains as a substring:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>either <q>Create</q> or <q>Copy</q> not followed by a lowercase letter, or</li>
-<li>either <q>create</q> or <q>copy</q> not followed by a lowercase
-letter and not preceded by any letter, whether uppercase or lowercase.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>A second attribute, <tt>cf_unknown_transfer</tt>, signifies that a
-function's transfer semantics cannot be accurately captured using any
-of these annotations. A program is ill-formed if it annotates the
-same function with both <tt>cf_audited_transfer</tt>
-and <tt>cf_unknown_transfer</tt>.</p>
-
-<p>A pragma is provided to facilitate the mass annotation of interfaces:</p>
-
-<pre>#pragma clang arc_cf_code_audited begin
-...
-#pragma clang arc_cf_code_audited end</pre>
-
-<p>All C functions declared within the extent of this pragma are
-treated as if annotated with the <tt>cf_audited_transfer</tt>
-attribute unless they otherwise have the <tt>cf_unknown_transfer</tt>
-attribute. The pragma is accepted in all language modes. A program
-is ill-formed if it attempts to change files, whether by including a
-file or ending the current file, within the extent of this pragma.</p>
-
-<p>It is possible to test for all the features in this section with
-<tt>__has_feature(arc_cf_code_audited)</tt>.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: A significant inconvenience in
-ARC programming is the necessity of interacting with APIs based around
-C retainable pointers. These features are designed to make it
-relatively easy for API authors to quickly review and annotate their
-interfaces, in turn improving the fidelity of tools such as the static
-analyzer and ARC. The single-file restriction on the pragma is
-designed to eliminate the risk of accidentally annotating some other
-header's interfaces.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- misc.c-retainable.audit -->
-
-</div> <!-- misc.c-retainable -->
-
-</div> <!-- misc -->
-
-<div id="runtime">
-<h1>Runtime support</h1>
-
-<p>This section describes the interaction between the ARC runtime and
-the code generated by the ARC compiler. This is not part of the ARC
-language specification; instead, it is effectively a language-specific
-ABI supplement, akin to the <q>Itanium</q> generic ABI for C++.</p>
-
-<p>Ownership qualification does not alter the storage requirements for
-objects, except that it is undefined behavior if a <tt>__weak</tt>
-object is inadequately aligned for an object of type <tt>id</tt>. The
-other qualifiers may be used on explicitly under-aligned memory.</p>
-
-<p>The runtime tracks <tt>__weak</tt> objects which holds non-null
-values. It is undefined behavior to direct modify a <tt>__weak</tt>
-object which is being tracked by the runtime except through an
-<a href="#runtime.objc_storeWeak"><tt>objc_storeWeak</tt></a>,
-<a href="#runtime.objc_destroyWeak"><tt>objc_destroyWeak</tt></a>,
-or <a href="#runtime.objc_moveWeak"><tt>objc_moveWeak</tt></a>
-call.</p>
-
-<p>The runtime must provide a number of new entrypoints which the
-compiler may emit, which are described in the remainder of this
-section.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: Several of these functions are
-semantically equivalent to a message send; we emit calls to C
-functions instead because:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>the machine code to do so is significantly smaller,</li>
-<li>it is much easier to recognize the C functions in the ARC optimizer, and</li>
-<li>a sufficient sophisticated runtime may be able to avoid the
-message send in common cases.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Several other of these functions are <q>fused</q> operations which
-can be described entirely in terms of other operations. We use the
-fused operations primarily as a code-size optimization, although in
-some cases there is also a real potential for avoiding redundant
-operations in the runtime.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_autorelease">
-<h1><tt>id objc_autorelease(id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a
-valid object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it
-adds the object to the innermost autorelease pool exactly as if the
-object had been sent the <tt>autorelease</tt> message.</p>
-<p>Always returns <tt>value</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_autorelease -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_autoreleasePoolPop">
-<h1><tt>void objc_autoreleasePoolPop(void *pool);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>pool</tt> is the result of a previous call to
-<a href="runtime.objc_autoreleasePoolPush"><tt>objc_autoreleasePoolPush</tt></a>
-on the current thread, where neither <tt>pool</tt> nor any enclosing
-pool have previously been popped.</p>
-<p>Releases all the objects added to the given autorelease pool and
-any autorelease pools it encloses, then sets the current autorelease
-pool to the pool directly enclosing <tt>pool</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_autoreleasePoolPop -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_autoreleasePoolPush">
-<h1><tt>void *objc_autoreleasePoolPush(void);</tt></h1>
-<p>Creates a new autorelease pool that is enclosed by the current
-pool, makes that the current pool, and returns an opaque <q>handle</q>
-to it.</p>
-
-<div class="rationale"><p>Rationale: while the interface is described
-as an explicit hierarchy of pools, the rules allow the implementation
-to just keep a stack of objects, using the stack depth as the opaque
-pool handle.</p></div>
-
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_autoreleasePoolPush -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_autoreleaseReturnValue">
-<h1><tt>id objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a
-valid object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it
-makes a best effort to hand off ownership of a retain count on the
-object to a call
-to <a href="runtime.objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue"><tt>objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue</tt></a>
-for the same object in an enclosing call frame. If this is not
-possible, the object is autoreleased as above.</p>
-<p>Always returns <tt>value</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_autoreleaseReturnValue -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_copyWeak">
-<h1><tt>void objc_copyWeak(id *dest, id *src);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>src</tt> is a valid pointer which either
-contains a null pointer or has been registered as a <tt>__weak</tt>
-object. <tt>dest</tt> is a valid pointer which has not been
-registered as a <tt>__weak</tt> object.</p>
-<p><tt>dest</tt> is initialized to be equivalent to <tt>src</tt>,
-potentially registering it with the runtime. Equivalent to the
-following code:</p>
-<pre>void objc_copyWeak(id *dest, id *src) {
- objc_release(objc_initWeak(dest, objc_loadWeakRetained(src)));
-}</pre>
-<p>Must be atomic with respect to calls to <tt>objc_storeWeak</tt>
-on <tt>src</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_copyWeak -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_destroyWeak">
-<h1><tt>void objc_destroyWeak(id *object);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>object</tt> is a valid pointer which
-either contains a null pointer or has been registered as
-a <tt>__weak</tt> object.</p>
-<p><tt>object</tt> is unregistered as a weak object, if it ever was.
-The current value of <tt>object</tt> is left unspecified; otherwise,
-equivalent to the following code:</p>
-<pre>void objc_destroyWeak(id *object) {
- objc_storeWeak(object, nil);
-}</pre>
-<p>Does not need to be atomic with respect to calls
-to <tt>objc_storeWeak</tt> on <tt>object</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_destroyWeak -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_initWeak">
-<h1><tt>id objc_initWeak(id *object, id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>object</tt> is a valid pointer which has
-not been registered as a <tt>__weak</tt> object. <tt>value</tt> is
-null or a pointer to a valid object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is a null pointer or the object to which it
-points has begun deallocation, <tt>object</tt> is zero-initialized.
-Otherwise, <tt>object</tt> is registered as a <tt>__weak</tt> object
-pointing to <tt>value</tt>. Equivalent to the following code:</p>
-<pre>id objc_initWeak(id *object, id value) {
- *object = nil;
- return objc_storeWeak(object, value);
-}</pre>
-<p>Returns the value of <tt>object</tt> after the call.</p>
-<p>Does not need to be atomic with respect to calls
-to <tt>objc_storeWeak</tt> on <tt>object</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_initWeak -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_loadWeak">
-<h1><tt>id objc_loadWeak(id *object);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>object</tt> is a valid pointer which
-either contains a null pointer or has been registered as
-a <tt>__weak</tt> object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>object</tt> is registered as a <tt>__weak</tt> object, and
-the last value stored into <tt>object</tt> has not yet been
-deallocated or begun deallocation, retains and autoreleases that value
-and returns it. Otherwise returns null. Equivalent to the following
-code:</p>
-<pre>id objc_loadWeak(id *object) {
- return objc_autorelease(objc_loadWeakRetained(object));
-}</pre>
-<p>Must be atomic with respect to calls to <tt>objc_storeWeak</tt>
-on <tt>object</tt>.</p>
-<div class="rationale">Rationale: loading weak references would be
-inherently prone to race conditions without the retain.</div>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_loadWeak -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_loadWeakRetained">
-<h1><tt>id objc_loadWeakRetained(id *object);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>object</tt> is a valid pointer which
-either contains a null pointer or has been registered as
-a <tt>__weak</tt> object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>object</tt> is registered as a <tt>__weak</tt> object, and
-the last value stored into <tt>object</tt> has not yet been
-deallocated or begun deallocation, retains that value and returns it.
-Otherwise returns null.</p>
-<p>Must be atomic with respect to calls to <tt>objc_storeWeak</tt>
-on <tt>object</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_loadWeakRetained -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_moveWeak">
-<h1><tt>void objc_moveWeak(id *dest, id *src);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>src</tt> is a valid pointer which either
-contains a null pointer or has been registered as a <tt>__weak</tt>
-object. <tt>dest</tt> is a valid pointer which has not been
-registered as a <tt>__weak</tt> object.</p>
-<p><tt>dest</tt> is initialized to be equivalent to <tt>src</tt>,
-potentially registering it with the runtime. <tt>src</tt> may then be
-left in its original state, in which case this call is equivalent
-to <a href="#runtime.objc_copyWeak"><tt>objc_copyWeak</tt></a>, or it
-may be left as null.</p>
-<p>Must be atomic with respect to calls to <tt>objc_storeWeak</tt>
-on <tt>src</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_moveWeak -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_release">
-<h1><tt>void objc_release(id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a
-valid object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it
-performs a release operation exactly as if the object had been sent
-the <tt>release</tt> message.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_release -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_retain">
-<h1><tt>id objc_retain(id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a
-valid object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it
-performs a retain operation exactly as if the object had been sent
-the <tt>retain</tt> message.</p>
-<p>Always returns <tt>value</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_retain -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_retainAutorelease">
-<h1><tt>id objc_retainAutorelease(id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a
-valid object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it
-performs a retain operation followed by an autorelease operation.
-Equivalent to the following code:</p>
-<pre>id objc_retainAutorelease(id value) {
- return objc_autorelease(objc_retain(value));
-}</pre>
-<p>Always returns <tt>value</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_retainAutorelease -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue">
-<h1><tt>id objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue(id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a
-valid object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it
-performs a retain operation followed by the operation described in
-<a href="#runtime.objc_autoreleaseReturnValue"><tt>objc_autoreleaseReturnValue</tt></a>.
-Equivalent to the following code:</p>
-<pre>id objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue(id value) {
- return objc_autoreleaseReturnValue(objc_retain(value));
-}</pre>
-<p>Always returns <tt>value</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue">
-<h1><tt>id objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue(id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a
-valid object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, it
-attempts to accept a hand off of a retain count from a call to
-<a href="#runtime.objc_autoreleaseReturnValue"><tt>objc_autoreleaseReturnValue</tt></a>
-on <tt>value</tt> in a recently-called function or something it
-calls. If that fails, it performs a retain operation exactly
-like <a href="#runtime.objc_retain"><tt>objc_retain</tt></a>.</p>
-<p>Always returns <tt>value</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_retainAutoreleasedReturnValue -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_retainBlock">
-<h1><tt>id objc_retainBlock(id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a
-valid block object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is null, this call has no effect. Otherwise, if
-the block pointed to by <tt>value</tt> is still on the stack, it is
-copied to the heap and the address of the copy is returned. Otherwise
-a retain operation is performed on the block exactly as if it had been
-sent the <tt>retain</tt> message.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_retainBlock -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_storeStrong">
-<h1><tt>id objc_storeStrong(id *object, id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>object</tt> is a valid pointer to
-a <tt>__strong</tt> object which is adequately aligned for a
-pointer. <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a valid object.</p>
-<p>Performs the complete sequence for assigning to a <tt>__strong</tt>
-object of non-block type. Equivalent to the following code:</p>
-<pre>id objc_storeStrong(id *object, id value) {
- value = [value retain];
- id oldValue = *object;
- *object = value;
- [oldValue release];
- return value;
-}</pre>
-<p>Always returns <tt>value</tt>.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_storeStrong -->
-
-<div id="runtime.objc_storeWeak">
-<h1><tt>id objc_storeWeak(id *object, id value);</tt></h1>
-<p><i>Precondition:</i> <tt>object</tt> is a valid pointer which
-either contains a null pointer or has been registered as
-a <tt>__weak</tt> object. <tt>value</tt> is null or a pointer to a
-valid object.</p>
-<p>If <tt>value</tt> is a null pointer or the object to which it
-points has begun deallocation, <tt>object</tt> is assigned null
-and unregistered as a <tt>__weak</tt> object. Otherwise,
-<tt>object</tt> is registered as a <tt>__weak</tt> object or has its
-registration updated to point to <tt>value</tt>.</p>
-<p>Returns the value of <tt>object</tt> after the call.</p>
-</div> <!-- runtime.objc_storeWeak -->
-
-</div> <!-- runtime -->
-</div> <!-- root -->
-</body>
-</html>
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