You may use a subset of the utilities provided by the Abseil library when writing WebRTC C++ code. Below, we list the explicitly allowed and the explicitly disallowed subsets of Abseil; if you find yourself in need of something that isn’t in either subset, please add it to the allowed subset in this doc in the same CL that adds the first use.
For build targets of type rtc_library, rtc_source_set and rtc_static_library, dependencies on Abseil need to be listed in deps.
The GN templates will take care of generating the proper dependency when used within Chromium or standalone. In that build mode, WebRTC will depend on a monolithic Abseil build target that will generate a shared library.
absl::AnyInvocable
absl::bind_front
absl::Cleanup
absl::InlinedVector
absl::Nonnull and absl::Nullable
absl::WrapUnique
absl::string_view
The functions in absl/strings/ascii.h, absl/strings/match.h, and absl/strings/str_replace.h.
The functions in absl/strings/escaping.h.
absl::is_trivially_copy_constructible, absl::is_trivially_copy_assignable, and absl::is_trivially_destructible from absl/meta/type_traits.h.
absl::variant and related stuff from absl/types/variant.h.
The functions in absl/algorithm/algorithm.h and absl/algorithm/container.h.
absl/base/const_init.h for mutex initialization.
The macros in absl/base/attributes.h, absl/base/config.h and absl/base/macros.h.
absl/numeric/bits.h
ABSL_FLAG is allowed in tests and tools, but disallowed in in non-test code.
absl::make_uniqueUse std::make_unique instead.
absl::MutexUse webrtc::Mutex instead.
absl::optionalUse std::optional instead.
absl::SpanUse rtc::ArrayView instead.
absl::Span differs from rtc::ArrayView on several points, and both of them differ from the std::span introduced in C++20. We should just keep using rtc::ArrayView and avoid absl::Span. When WebRTC switches to C++20, we will consider replacing rtc::ArrayView with std::span.
absl::StrCat, absl::StrAppend, absl::StrJoin, absl::StrSplitUse rtc::SimpleStringBuilder to build strings.
These are optimized for speed, not binary size. Even StrCat calls with a modest number of arguments can easily add several hundred bytes to the binary.