"main" files that import modules. When loading any of these kinds of
AST files, we make the modules that were imported visible into the
translation unit that loaded the PCH file or preamble.
llvm-svn: 145737
precompiled header. Previously, we were trying to gather predefines
buffers from all kinds of AST files (which doesn't make sense) and
were performing some validation when AST files were loaded as main
files.
With these tweaks, using PCH files that import modules no longer fails
immediately (due to mismatched predefines buffers). However, module
visibility is lost, so this feature does not yet work.
llvm-svn: 145709
only the macro definitions from visible (sub)modules will actually be
visible. This provides the same behavior for macros that r145640
provided for declarations.
llvm-svn: 145683
(sub)module, all of the names may be hidden, just the macro names may
be exposed (for example, after the preprocessor has seen the import of
the module but the parser has not), or all of the names may be
exposed. Importing a module makes its names, and the names in any of
its non-explicit submodules, visible to name lookup (transitively).
This commit only introduces the notion of name visible and marks
modules and submodules as visible when they are imported. The actual
name-hiding logic in the AST reader will follow (along with test cases).
llvm-svn: 145586
a standard global/local scheme, so that submodule definitions will
eventually be able to refer to submodules in other top-level
modules. We'll need this functionality soonish.
llvm-svn: 145549
library, since modules cut across all of the libraries. Rename
serialization::Module to serialization::ModuleFile to side-step the
annoying naming conflict. Prune a bunch of ModuleMap.h includes that
are no longer needed (most files only needed the Module type).
llvm-svn: 145538
we may end up having added more pending stuff to do, so go in a loop until everything
is cleared out.
This fixes the error in rdar://10278815 which has a certain David Lynch-esque quality..
error: unknown type name 'BOOL'; did you mean 'BOOL'?
llvm-svn: 145536
submodules. This information will eventually be used for name hiding
when dealing with submodules. For now, we only use it to ensure that
the module "key" returned when loading a module will always be a
module (rather than occasionally being a FileEntry).
llvm-svn: 145497
inside an objc container that "contains" other file-level declarations.
When getting the array of file-level declarations that overlap with a file region,
we failed to report that the region overlaps with an objc container, if
the container had other file-level declarations declared lexically inside it.
Fix this by marking such declarations as "isTopLevelDeclInObjCContainer" in the AST
and handling them appropriately.
llvm-svn: 145109
file in the source manager. This allows us to properly create and use
modules described by module map files without umbrella headers (or
with incompletely umbrella headers). More generally, we can actually
build a PCH file that makes use of file -> buffer remappings, which
could be useful in libclang in the future.
llvm-svn: 144830
it is going to be rewritten (and the chain will be serialized again), otherwise we may form a cycle in its
categories list when deserializing.
Also introduce ASTMutationListener::CompletedObjCForwardRef to notify that a forward reference
was completed; using Decl's isChangedSinceDeserialization/setChangedSinceDeserialization
is bug inducing and kinda gross, we should phase it out.
Fixes infinite loop in rdar://10418538.
llvm-svn: 144465
In certain cases ASTReader would call the normal DiagnosticsEngine API to initialize
the state of diagnostic pragmas but DiagnosticsEngine would try to compare source locations
leading to crash because the main FileID was not yet initialized.
Yet another case of the ASTReader trying to use the normal APIs and inadvertently breaking
invariants. Fix this by having the ASTReader set up the internal state directly.
llvm-svn: 144153
property references to use a new PseudoObjectExpr
expression which pairs a syntactic form of the expression
with a set of semantic expressions implementing it.
This should significantly reduce the complexity required
elsewhere in the compiler to deal with these kinds of
expressions (e.g. IR generation's special l-value kind,
the static analyzer's Message abstraction), at the lower
cost of specifically dealing with the odd AST structure
of these expressions. It should also greatly simplify
efforts to implement similar language features in the
future, most notably Managed C++'s properties and indexed
properties.
Most of the effort here is in dealing with the various
clients of the AST. I've gone ahead and simplified the
ObjC rewriter's use of properties; other clients, like
IR-gen and the static analyzer, have all the old
complexity *and* all the new complexity, at least
temporarily. Many thanks to Ted for writing and advising
on the necessary changes to the static analyzer.
I've xfailed a small diagnostics regression in the static
analyzer at Ted's request.
llvm-svn: 143867
that it retains source location information for the type. Aside from
general goodness (being able to walk the types described in that
information), we now have a proper representation for dependent
delegating constructors. Fixes PR10457 (for real).
llvm-svn: 143410
Introduce a FILE_SORTED_DECLS [de]serialization record that contains
a file sorted array of file-level DeclIDs in a PCH/Module.
The rationale is to allow "targeted" deserialization of decls inside
a range of a source file.
Cocoa PCH increased by 0.8%
Difference of creation time for Cocoa PCH is below the noise level.
llvm-svn: 143238
of decl bit offsets.
This allows us to easily get at the location of a decl without deserializing it.
It increases size of Cocoa PCH by only 0.2%.
llvm-svn: 143123
AST file more lazy, so that we don't eagerly load that information for
all known identifiers each time a new AST file is loaded. The eager
reloading made some sense in the context of precompiled headers, since
very few identifiers were defined before PCH load time. With modules,
however, a huge amount of code can get parsed before we see an
@import, so laziness becomes important here.
The approach taken to make this information lazy is fairly simple:
when we load a new AST file, we mark all of the existing identifiers
as being out-of-date. Whenever we want to access information that may
come from an AST (e.g., whether the identifier has a macro definition,
or what top-level declarations have that name), we check the
out-of-date bit and, if it's set, ask the AST reader to update the
IdentifierInfo from the AST files. The update is a merge, and we now
take care to merge declarations before/after imports with declarations
from multiple imports.
The results of this optimization are fairly dramatic. On a small
application that brings in 14 non-trivial modules, this takes modules
from being > 3x slower than a "perfect" PCH file down to 30% slower
for a full rebuild. A partial rebuild (where the PCH file or modules
can be re-used) is down to 7% slower. Making the PCH file just a
little imperfect (e.g., adding two smallish modules used by a bunch of
.m files that aren't in the PCH file) tips the scales in favor of the
modules approach, with 24% faster partial rebuilds.
This is just a first step; the lazy scheme could possibly be improved
by adding versioning, so we don't search into modules we already
searched. Moreover, we'll need similar lazy schemes for all of the
other lookup data structures, such as DeclContexts.
llvm-svn: 143100
essence, the redeclaration chain for a class could end up in an
inconsistent state while deserializing multiple declarations in that
chain, where the circular linked list was not, in fact,
circular. Since only two redeclarations of the same entity will get
loaded when we're in this state, restore circularity when both have
been loaded. Fixes <rdar://problem/10324940> / PR11195.
llvm-svn: 143037
expressions: expressions which refer to a logical rather
than a physical l-value, where the logical object is
actually accessed via custom getter/setter code.
A subsequent patch will generalize the AST for these
so that arbitrary "implementing" sub-expressions can
be provided.
Right now the only client is ObjC properties, but
this should be generalizable to similar language
features, e.g. Managed C++'s __property methods.
llvm-svn: 142914
statements. As noted in the documentation for the AST node, the
semantics of __if_exists/__if_not_exists are somewhat different from
the way Visual C++ implements them, because our parsed-template
representation can't accommodate VC++ semantics without serious
contortions. Hopefully this implementation is "good enough".
llvm-svn: 142901