implementation of C99's attempt to control the C++ standard. *sigh*
The C99 standard says that certain macros in <stdint.h>, such as SIZE_MAX,
should not be defined when the header is included in C++ mode, unless
__STDC_LIMIT_MACROS and __STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS are defined. The C++11 standard
says "Thanks, but no thanks" and C11 removed this rule, but various C library
implementations (such as glibc) follow C99 anyway.
g++ prior to 4.8 worked around the C99 / glibc behavior by defining
__STDC_*_MACROS in <cstdint>, which was incorrect, because <stdint.h> is
supposed to provide these macros too. g++ 4.8 works around it by defining
__STDC_*_MACROS in its builtin <stdint.h> header.
This change makes Clang act like g++ 4.8 in this regard: our <stdint.h> now
countermands any attempt by the C library to implement the undesired C99 rules,
by defining the __STDC_*_MACROS first. Unlike g++, we do this even in C++98
mode, since that was the intent of the C++ committee, matches the behavior
required in C11, and matches our built-in implementation of <stdint.h>.
llvm-svn: 179419
We had been defining Neon intrinsics as "static" with always_inline attributes.
If you use them from an extern inline function, you get a warning, e.g.:
static function 'vadd_u8' is used in an inline function with external linkage
This change simply adds the inline keyword to avoid that warning.
llvm-svn: 179406
There are few cases where we can track the region, but cannot print the note,
which makes the testing limited. (Though, I’ve tested this manually by making
all regions non-printable.) Even though the applicability is limited now, the enhancement
will be more relevant as we start tracking more regions.
llvm-svn: 179396
1) Driver/output-file-is-dir.c - Checks for object file which can't
be created for Hexagon since assembler is unavailable.
2) PCH/cxx-typeid.cpp - 'typeinfo' include file is unavailable for Hexagon.
llvm-svn: 179385
Previously we'd only detect structural errors on the very first level.
This leads to incorrectly balanced braces not being discovered, and thus
incorrect indentation.
This change fixes the problem by:
- changing the parser to use an error state that can be detected
anywhere inside the productions, for example if we get an eof on
SOME_MACRO({ some block <eof>
- previously we'd never break lines when we discovered a structural
error; now we break even in the case of a structural error if there
are two unwrapped lines within the same line; thus,
void f() { while (true) { g(); y(); } }
will still be re-formatted, even if there's missing braces somewhere
in the file
- still exclude macro definitions from generating structural error;
macro definitions are inbalanced snippets
llvm-svn: 179379
The new emacs integration is simpler, does not save the current file
before reformatting and ensures that emacs does not scroll as a result
of formatting.
Also explicitly set the style in clang-format tests to make them more
robust.
llvm-svn: 179372
Before:
1. Calling 'foo'
2. Doing something interesting
3. Returning from 'foo'
4. Some kind of error here
After:
1. Calling 'foo'
2. Doing something interesting
3. Returning from 'foo'
4. Some kind of error here
The location of the note is already in the caller, not the callee, so this
just brings the "depth" attribute in line with that.
This only affects plist diagnostic consumers (i.e. Xcode). It's necessary
for Xcode to associate the control flow arrows with the right stack frame.
<rdar://problem/13634363>
llvm-svn: 179351
In this code
int getZero() {
return 0;
}
void test() {
int problem = 1 / getZero(); // expected-warning {{Division by zero}}
}
we generate these arrows:
+-----------------+
| v
int problem = 1 / getZero();
^ |
+---+
where the top one represents the control flow up to the first call, and the
bottom one represents the flow to the division.* It turns out, however, that
we were generating the top arrow twice, as if attempting to "set up context"
after we had already returned from the call. This resulted in poor
highlighting in Xcode.
* Arguably the best location for the division is the '/', but that's a
different problem.
<rdar://problem/13326040>
llvm-svn: 179350
This is a Darwin-SDK-specific hash criteria used to identify a
particular SDK without having to hash the contents of all of its
headers. If other platforms have such versioned files, we should add
those checks here.
llvm-svn: 179346
For struct-path aware TBAA, we used to use scalar type node as the scalar tag,
which has an incompatible format with the struct path tag. We now use the same
format: base type, access type and offset.
We also uniformize the scalar type node and the struct type node: name, a list
of pairs (offset + pointer to MDNode). For scalar type, we have a single pair.
These are to make implementaiton of aliasing rules easier.
llvm-svn: 179335
This new option is the default, but it is useful to have a flag to override
-mno-implicit-float by putting -mimplicit-float later on the command line.
llvm-svn: 179309
Summary:
Handles all inheritance models for both data and function member
pointers.
Also implements isZeroInitializable() and refactors some of the null
member pointer code.
MSVC supports converting member pointers through virtual bases, which
clang does not (yet?) support. Implementing that extension is covered
by http://llvm.org/15713
Reviewers: rjmccall
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D613
llvm-svn: 179305
Function declarations are now broken with the following preferences:
1) break amongst arguments.
2) break after return type.
3) break after (.
4) break before after nested name specifiers.
Options #2 or #3 are preferred over #1 only if a substantial number of
lines can be saved by that.
llvm-svn: 179287
The behavior can be overridden by setting LIT_USE_INTERNAL_SHELL=0 in
the environment.
This fixes issues with /dev/null for me and brings the test suite time
down to 30s. =D
llvm-svn: 179283
This required some tedious reordering to match clang's order.
Presumably these ObjC tests were generated based on llvm-gcc's output
ordering.
llvm-svn: 179282
It's a kind of implicit conversion, which we generally drop, but
more importantly it's got very specific placement requirements.
rdar://13617051
llvm-svn: 179254
For this source:
const int &ref = someStruct.bitfield;
We used to generate this AST:
DeclStmt [...]
`-VarDecl [...] ref 'const int &'
`-MaterializeTemporaryExpr [...] 'const int' lvalue
`-ImplicitCastExpr [...] 'const int' lvalue <NoOp>
`-MemberExpr [...] 'int' lvalue bitfield .bitfield [...]
`-DeclRefExpr [...] 'struct X' lvalue ParmVar [...] 'someStruct' 'struct X'
Notice the lvalue inside the MaterializeTemporaryExpr, which is very
confusing (and caused an assertion to fire in the analyzer - PR15694).
We now generate this:
DeclStmt [...]
`-VarDecl [...] ref 'const int &'
`-MaterializeTemporaryExpr [...] 'const int' lvalue
`-ImplicitCastExpr [...] 'int' <LValueToRValue>
`-MemberExpr [...] 'int' lvalue bitfield .bitfield [...]
`-DeclRefExpr [...] 'struct X' lvalue ParmVar [...] 'someStruct' 'struct X'
Which makes a lot more sense. This allows us to remove code in both
CodeGen and AST that hacked around this special case.
The commit also makes Clang accept this (legal) C++11 code:
int &&ref = std::move(someStruct).bitfield
PR15694 / <rdar://problem/13600396>
llvm-svn: 179250
The heuristic here (proposed by Jordan) is that, usually, if a leak is due to an early exit from init, the allocation site will be
a call to alloc. Note that in other cases init resets self to [super init], which becomes the allocation site of the object.
llvm-svn: 179221
Before:
class A {
public : // test
};
After:
class A {
public: // test
};
Also remove duplicate methods calculating properties of AnnotatedTokens
and make them members of AnnotatedTokens so that they are in a common
place.
llvm-svn: 179167
constructor. This isn't quite perfect (as usual, we don't handle default
arguments correctly yet, and we don't deal with copy/move constructors for
arguments correctly either, but this will be fixed when we implement core issue
1351.
This completes our support for inheriting constructors.
llvm-svn: 179154
The GNU line marker directive was sharing code with the #line directive, but some of the warnings/errors were reporting as #line directive diagnostics in both cases.
Previously:
#line 11foo1 ==> "#line directive requires a simple digit sequence"
# 11foo1 ==> "#line directive requires a simple digit sequence"
Now, we get:
#line 11foo1 ==> "#line directive requires a simple digit sequence"
# 11foo1 ==> "GNU line marker directive requires a simple digit sequence"
llvm-svn: 179139
fact be defined and used in another TU.
Reshuffle some test cases because we suppress -Wunused-variable after we've
emitted an error.
This fixes PR15558.
llvm-svn: 179138
These run lines originally tested that the fix-its were properly applied.
Originally, the fixits were attached to warnings and were applied by -fixit.
Now, the fixits are attached to notes, so nothing happens. These run lines
still manage to pass since Clang will produce an empty output which gets piped
back to Clang. Then Clang produces no error on an empty input.
llvm-svn: 179131
isVirtual - matches CXXMethodDecl nodes for virtual methods
isOverride - matches CXXMethodDecl nodes for methods that override virtual methods from a base class.
Author: Philip Dunstan <phil@philipdunstan.com>
llvm-svn: 179126
when result type of protocol property and getter method
differ by fixing a more serious problem. When a forward
protocol declaration comes between its definition and
its use in class protocol list, the forward protocol
ast was being used in building the protocol list.
// rdar://12522752
llvm-svn: 179108
Summary:
Some codebases use these kinds of macros in functions, e.g. Chromium's
IPC_BEGIN_MESSAGE_MAP, IPC_BEGIN_MESSAGE_HANDLER, etc.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D645
llvm-svn: 179099
This adds an emacs editor integration (thanks to Ami Fischman). Also
pulls out the style into a variable for the vi integration and just
uses clang-formats defaults style in clang-format-diff.py.
llvm-svn: 179098
Previously, the analyzer used isIntegerType() everywhere, which uses the C
definition of "integer". The C++ predicate with the same behavior is
isIntegerOrUnscopedEnumerationType().
However, the analyzer is /really/ using this to ask if it's some sort of
"integrally representable" type, i.e. it should include C++11 scoped
enumerations as well. hasIntegerRepresentation() sounds like the right
predicate, but that includes vectors, which the analyzer represents by its
elements.
This commit audits all uses of isIntegerType() and replaces them with the
general isIntegerOrEnumerationType(), except in some specific cases where
it makes sense to exclude scoped enumerations, or any enumerations. These
cases now use isIntegerOrUnscopedEnumerationType() and getAs<BuiltinType>()
plus BuiltinType::isInteger().
isIntegerType() is hereby banned in the analyzer - lib/StaticAnalysis and
include/clang/StaticAnalysis. :-)
Fixes real assertion failures. PR15703 / <rdar://problem/12350701>
llvm-svn: 179081
Test that the path notes do not change. I don’t think we should print a note on escape.
Also, I’ve removed a check that assumed that the family stored in the RefStete could be
AF_None and added an assert in the constructor.
llvm-svn: 179075
We were assuming that any expression used as a converted constant
expression would either not have a folded constant value or would be
an integer, which is not the case for some ill-formed constant
expressions. Because converted constant expressions are only used
where integral values are expected, we can simply treat this as an
error path. If that ever changes, we'll need to widen the interface of
Sema::CheckConvertedConstantExpression() anyway.
llvm-svn: 179068
This fixes a regression I introduced in r178136, where we would not
consider the using directives from the semantic declaration contexts
that aren't represented by the lexical scopes (Scope) when performing
unqualified name lookup. This lead to horribly funny diagnostics like
"no identifier named 'foo'; did you mean 'foo'?".
llvm-svn: 179067
When two template decls with the same name are used in this diagnostic,
force them to print their qualified names. This changes the bad message of:
candidate template ignored: could not match 'array' against 'array'
to the better message of:
candidate template ignored: could not match 'NS2::array' against 'NS1::array'
llvm-svn: 179056
The idea is to indent according to operator precedence and pretty much
identical to how stuff would be indented with parenthesis.
Before:
bool value = aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa +
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa +
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa ==
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa *
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb +
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb &&
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa *
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa >
ccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccc;
After:
bool value = aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa +
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa +
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa ==
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa *
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb +
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb &&
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa *
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa >
ccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccc;
llvm-svn: 179049
This slightly propagates an existing hack that delays when we provide
access specifiers for the visible conversion functions of a class by
copying the available access specifier early. The only client this
affects is LLDB, which tends to discover and add conversion functions
after the class is technically "complete". As such, the only
observable difference is in LLDB, so the testing will go there.
llvm-svn: 179029
linkage specification, and is marked as __attribute__((used)), try to also give
it the unmangled name (by emitting an internal linkage alias) if nothing else
within the translation unit would use that name. This allows inline asm in that
translation unit to use the entity via its unmangled name, which people
apparently rely on.
llvm-svn: 178950
This is important because sometimes two nodes are identical, except the
second one is a sink.
This bug has probably been around for a while, but it wouldn't have been an
issue in the old report graph algorithm. I'm ashamed to say I actually looked
at this the first time around and thought it would never be a problem...and
then didn't include an assertion to back that up.
PR15684
llvm-svn: 178944
New rule:
- Method decls in @implementation are considered "redeclarations"
and inherit deprecated/availability from the @interface.
- All other cases are consider overrides, which do not inherit
deprecated/availability. For example:
(a) @interface redeclares a method in an adopted protocol.
(b) A subclass redeclares a method in a superclass.
(c) A protocol redeclares a method from another protocol it adopts.
The idea is that API authors should have the ability to easily
move availability/deprecated up and down a class/protocol hierarchy.
A redeclaration means that the availability/deprecation is a blank
slate.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13574571>
llvm-svn: 178937
As mentioned in the previous commit message, the use-after-free and
double-free warnings for 'delete' are worth enabling even while the
leak warnings still have false positives.
llvm-svn: 178891
This splits the leak-checking part of alpha.cplusplus.NewDelete into a
separate user-level checker, alpha.cplusplus.NewDeleteLeaks. All the
difficult false positives we've seen with the new/delete checker have been
spurious leak warnings; the use-after-free warnings and mismatched
deallocator warnings, while rare, have always been valid.
<rdar://problem/6194569>
llvm-svn: 178890
The prefixes and names used are now identical to 32-bit ARM, which is also
expected to remain unchanged.
If we made this change after a release, we'd probably have to support both
variants for a while, but I think since AArch64 exists only on trunk now, it's
acceptable to simply swap them now.
llvm-svn: 178870
The statement passed to isTrackedFamily() might be a user defined function calling malloc; in this case we got AF_NONE family for this function.
Now the allocation family is derived from Sym, that holds a family of a real allocator.
This commit is also a movement towards getting rid of tracking memory allocating by unknown means.
llvm-svn: 178834
This fixes an issue pointed to by Jordan: if unix.Malloc and unix.MismatchedDeallocator are both on, then we end up still tracking leaks of memory allocated by new.
Moved the guards right before emitting the bug reports to unify and simplify the logic of handling of multiple checkers. Now all the checkers perform their checks regardless of if they were enabled, or not, and it is decided just before the emitting of the report, if it should be emitted. (idea from Anna).
Additional changes:
improved test coverage for checker correlations;
refactoring: BadDealloc -> MismatchedDealloc
llvm-svn: 178814
This turns on not only destructor inlining, but inlining of constructors
for types with non-trivial destructors. Per r178516, we will still not
inline the constructor or destructor of anything that looks like a
container unless the analyzer-config option 'c++-container-inlining' is
set to 'true'.
In addition to the more precise path-sensitive model, this allows us to
catch simple smart pointer issues:
#include <memory>
void test() {
std::auto_ptr<int> releaser(new int[4]);
} // memory allocated with 'new[]' should not be deleted with 'delete'
<rdar://problem/12295363>
llvm-svn: 178805
...and add a new test case.
I thought this was broken, but it isn't; refactoring and reformatting anyway
so that I don't make the same mistake again. No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 178799
Added TBAABaseType and TBAAOffset in LValue. These two fields are initialized to
the actual type and 0, and are updated in EmitLValueForField.
Path-aware TBAA tags are enabled for EmitLoadOfScalar and EmitStoreOfScalar.
Added command line option -struct-path-tbaa.
llvm-svn: 178797
This removes a bit of patching that survived r178663. Without it we can produce
better a better error message for
const int a = 5;
static const int a;
llvm-svn: 178795
Having these not be the same makes an easy to misuse API. We should audit the
uses and probably rename to something like
foo->hasExternalLinkage():
The c++ standard one. That is UniqueExternalLinkage or ExternalLinkage.
foo->hasUniqueExternalLinkage():
Is UniqueExternalLinkage.
foo->hasCogeGenExternalLinkage():
Is ExternalLinkage.
llvm-svn: 178768
This mostly reverts 178733, but keeps the tests.
I don't claim to understand how hidden sub modules work or when we need to see
them (is that documented?), but this has the same semantics and avoids adding
hasExternalLinkageUncached which has the same foot gun potential as the old
hasExternalLinkage.
Last but not least, not computing linkage when it is not needed is more
efficient.
llvm-svn: 178739
This test was exactly the opposite of what it should be. We should check if
there old decl has linkage (where it makes sense) and if the new decl has
the extern keyword.
llvm-svn: 178735
caching the linkage for a declaration before we set up its redeclaration chain,
when determining whether a declaration could be a redeclaration of something
from an unimported submodule. We actually want to look at the declaration as if
it were not a redeclaration here, so compute the linkage but don't cache it.
llvm-svn: 178733
of a property just in case the property's getter happens to be +1.
We won't synthesize a getter for such a property, but we will allow
the user to define a +1 method for it.
rdar://13115896
llvm-svn: 178731
This is a nop right now, but committing this first avoids a temporary breakage
when the llvm files change to not default to exporting symbols.
llvm-svn: 178723
Normal name lookup ignores any hidden declarations. When name lookup
for builtin declarations fails, we just synthesize a new
declaration at the point of use. With modules, this could lead to
multiple declarations of the same builtin, if one came from a (hidden)
submodule that was later made visible. Teach name lookup to always
find builtin names, so we don't create these redundant declarations in
the first place.
llvm-svn: 178711
don't serialize a lookup map for the translation unit outside C++ mode, so we
can't tell when lookup within the TU needs to look within modules. Only apply
the fix outside C++ mode, and only to the translation unit.
llvm-svn: 178706
Improvement of r178684 and r178685.
Jordan has pointed out that I should not rely on the value of the condition to know which expression branch
has been taken. It will not work in cases the branch condition is an unknown value (ex: we do not track the constraints for floats).
The better way of doing this would be to find out if the current node is the right or left successor of the node
that has the ternary operator as a terminator (which is how this is done in other places, like ConditionBRVisitor).
llvm-svn: 178701
The lifetime of a temporary can be extended when it is immediately bound
to a local reference:
const Value &MyVal = Value("temporary");
In this case, the temporary object's lifetime is extended for the entire
scope of the reference; at the end of the scope it is destroyed.
The analyzer was modeling this improperly in two ways:
- Since we don't model temporary constructors just yet, we create a fake
temporary region when it comes time to "materialize" a temporary into
a real object (lvalue). This wasn't taking base casts into account when
the bindings being materialized was Unknown; now it always respects base
casts except when the temporary region is itself a pointer.
- When actually destroying the region, the analyzer did not actually load
from the reference variable -- it was basically destroying the reference
instead of its referent. Now it does do the load.
This will be more useful whenever we finally start modeling temporaries,
or at least those that get bound to local reference variables.
<rdar://problem/13552274>
llvm-svn: 178697
1) Look for the node where the condition expression is live when checking if
it is constrained to true or false.
2) Fix a bug in ProgramState::isNull, which was masking the problem. When
the expression is not a symbol (,which is the case when it is Unknown) return
unconstrained value, instead of value constrained to “false”!
(Thankfully other callers of isNull have not been effected by the bug.)
llvm-svn: 178684
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin10-gdb went back green
before it processed the reverted 178663, so it could not have been the culprit.
Revert "Revert 178663."
This reverts commit 4f8a3eb2ce5d4ba422483439e20c8cbb4d953a41.
llvm-svn: 178682
Syntactically means the function macro parameter names do not need to use the same
identifiers in order for the definitions to be considered identical.
Syntactic equivalence is a microsoft extension for macro redefinitions and we'll also
use this kind of comparison to check for ambiguous macros coming from modules.
rdar://13562254
llvm-svn: 178671
smarts so that it doesn't approve of keywords and/or type names when it
knows (based on its flags) that those kinds of corrections are not
wanted.
llvm-svn: 178668
For variables and functions clang used to store two storage classes. The one
"as written" in the code and a patched one, which, for example, propagates
static to the following decls.
This apparently is from the days clang lacked linkage computation. It is now
redundant and this patch removes it.
llvm-svn: 178663
This combines several related changes:
a) Don't break before after the variable types in for loops with a
single variable.
b) Better indent DeclStmts defining multiple variables.
Before:
bool aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa =
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa(aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa),
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb =
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb(bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb);
for (aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
aaaaaaaaaaa = aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa;
aaaaaaaaaaa != aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa; ++aaaaaaaaaaa) {
}
After:
bool aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa =
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa(aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa),
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb =
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb(bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb);
for (aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaa =
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa;
aaaaaaaaaaa != aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa; ++aaaaaaaaaaa) {
}
llvm-svn: 178641
Summary:
It turns out that we don't need to store CommentsBeforeNextToken in the
line state, but rather flush them before we start parsing preprocessor
directives. This fixes wrong comment indentation in code blocks in macro calls
(the test is included).
Reviewers: klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D617
llvm-svn: 178638
expressions are integer. It can also be ValueDecl expressions
Use the type information from the TemplateParameterList instead
Patch by Olivier Goffart!
llvm-svn: 178611
When support was added for declaration arguments, the case of variadic
declaration arguments was not supported. This patch fixes that problem by
not crashing when certain ValueDecl's are null.
Patch by Olivier Goffart!
llvm-svn: 178610
Value depenedent expressions for default arguments cannot be evaluated.
Instead, use the desugared template type to get an argument expression that
can be used. This is needed for both integer and declaration arguements.
Also, move this common code into a separate function.
Patch by Olivier Goffart!
llvm-svn: 178609
however, it doesn't do that unless we're optimizing. Change
that and haul out to a helper function. Also make this a driver
test appropriate rather than an assembly test.
llvm-svn: 178606
Doxygen treats "@command" the same as "\command" in a doc comment, so
whenever we talk about Objective-C things like "@interface" we have to
make sure to escape them.
Let's try to keep Clang -Wdocumentation-clean!
llvm-svn: 178603
- Find the correct region to represent the first array element when
constructing a CXXConstructorCall.
- If the array is trivial, model the copy with a primitive load/store.
- Don't warn about the "uninitialized" subscript in the AST -- we don't use
the helper variable that Sema provides.
<rdar://problem/13091608>
llvm-svn: 178602
a normal cleanup when entering a @try or @synchronized to
ensure that we clean that up if an exception is triggered.
Apparently GCC did this, so it's hard to argue that we shouldn't
do at least as much.
rdar://12364847
llvm-svn: 178599
This reverts commit r178497 since the backend has been fixed.
Also add a test to ensure that we're emitting template information for unions.
llvm-svn: 178587
overriding a non-deleted virtual function. The existing check for this doesn't
catch this case, because it fires before we mark the method as deleted.
llvm-svn: 178563
Summary:
This makes it possible to share code between lib/AST/MicrosoftCXXABI.cpp
and lib/CodeGen/MicrosoftCXXABI.cpp. No functionality change.
Also adds comments about the layout of the member pointer structs as I
currently understand them.
Reviewers: rjmccall
CC: timurrrr, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D590
llvm-svn: 178548
Basically we have always special-cased the top-level statement of an
unwrapped line (the one with ParenLevel == 0) and that lead to several
inconsistencies. All added tests were formatted in a strange way, for
example:
Before:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa();
if (aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa()) {
}
After:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa();
if (aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa()) {
}
llvm-svn: 178542
variable in a C99 inline (but not static-inline or extern-inline)
function definition.
The standard doesn't actually say that this doesn't apply to
"extern inline" definitions, but that seems like a useful extension,
and it at least doesn't have the obvious flaw that a static
mutable variable in an externally-available definition does.
rdar://13535367
llvm-svn: 178520
Refactor invalidateRegions to take SVals instead of Regions as input and teach RegionStore
about processing LazyCompoundVal as a top-level “escaping” value.
This addresses several false positives that get triggered by the NewDelete checker, but the
underlying issue is reproducible with other checkers as well (for example, MallocChecker).
llvm-svn: 178518
This is a heuristic to make up for the fact that the analyzer doesn't
model C++ containers very well. One example is modeling that
'std::distance(I, E) == 0' implies 'I == E'. In the future, it would be
nice to model this explicitly, but for now it just results in a lot of
false positives.
The actual heuristic checks if the base type has a member named 'begin' or
'iterator'. If so, we treat the constructors and destructors of that type
as opaque, rather than inlining them.
This is intended to drastically reduce the number of false positives
reported with experimental destructor support turned on. We can tweak the
heuristic in the future, but we'd rather err on the side of false negatives
for now.
<rdar://problem/13497258>
llvm-svn: 178516
Certain properties of a function can determine ahead of time whether or not
the function is inlineable, such as its kind, its signature, or its
location. We can cache this value in the FunctionSummaries map to avoid
rechecking these static properties for every call.
Note that the analyzer may still decide not to inline a specific call to
a function because of the particular dynamic properties of the call along
the current path.
No intended functionality change.
llvm-svn: 178515
The summaries lasted for the lifetime of the map anyway; no reason to
include an extra allocation.
Also, use SmallBitVector instead of BitVector to track the visited basic
blocks -- most functions will have less than 64 basic blocks -- and
use bitfields for the other fields to reduce the size of the structure.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 178514
This is controlled by the 'suppress-c++-stdlib' analyzer-config flag.
It is currently off by default.
This is more suppression than we'd like to do, since obviously there can
be user-caused issues within 'std', but it gives us the option to wield
a large hammer to suppress false positives the user likely can't work
around.
llvm-svn: 178513
when we actually end a lexical block.
* Added new test for line table / block cleanup.
* Follow-up to r177819 / rdar://problem/13115369
llvm-svn: 178490
visible. There's a lot of potential badness in how we're modelling
these things, but getting this much correct is reasonably easy.
rdar://13535367
llvm-svn: 178488
Evaluating a C++ new expression now includes generating an intermediate
ExplodedNode, and this node could very well represent a previously-
reachable state in the ExplodedGraph. If so, we can short-circuit the
rest of the evaluation.
Caught by the assertion a few lines later.
<rdar://problem/13510065>
llvm-svn: 178401
We can check if the receiver is nil in the node that corresponds to the StmtPoint of the message send.
At that point, the receiver is guaranteed to be live. We will find at least one unreclaimed node due to
my previous commit (look for StmtPoint instead of PostStmt) and the fact that the nil receiver nodes are tagged.
+ a couple of extra tests.
llvm-svn: 178381
trackNullOrUndefValue tries to find the first node that matches the statement it is tracking.
Since we collect PostStmt nodes (in node reclamation), none of those might be on the
current path, so relax the search to look for any StmtPoint.
llvm-svn: 178380
When using modules we should not ignore overridden methods from
categories that are hidden because the module is not visible.
This will give more consistent results (when imports change) and it's more
correct since the methods are indeed overridden even if they are not "visible"
for lookup purposes.
rdar://13350796
llvm-svn: 178374
* Store the .block_descriptor (instead of self) in the alloca so we
can guarantee that all captured variables are available at -O0.
* Add the missing OpDeref for the alloca.
rdar://problem/12767564
llvm-svn: 178361