The attempt to fix requoting behavior in r280487 after changes to
tooling::Replacements are incomplete. We essentially need to add to
replacements at the same position, one to insert a line break and one to
change the quoting and that's incompatible with the new
tooling::Replacement API, which does not allow for order-dependent
Replacements. To make the order clear, Replacements::merge() has to be
used, but that requires the merged Replacement to actually refer to the
changed text, which is hard to reproduce for the requoting.
This change fixes the behavior by moving the requoting to a completely
separate pass. The added benefit is that no weird ColumnWidth
calculations are necessary anymore and this should just work even if we
implement string literal splitting in the future.
llvm-svn: 280874
r280553 introduced an issue where we'd emit ambiguity errors for code
like:
```
void foo(int *, int);
void foo(unsigned int *, unsigned int);
void callFoo() {
unsigned int i;
foo(&i, 0); // ambiguous: int->unsigned int is worse than int->int,
// but unsigned int*->unsigned int* is better than
// int*->int*.
}
```
This patch fixes this issue by changing how we handle ill-formed (but
valid) implicit conversions. Candidates with said conversions now always
rank worse than candidates without them, and two candidates are
considered to be equally bad if they both have these conversions for
the same argument.
Additionally, this fixes a case in C++11 where we'd complain about an
ambiguity in a case like:
```
void f(char *, int);
void f(const char *, unsigned);
void g() { f("abc", 0); }
```
...Since conversion to char* from a string literal is considered
ill-formed in C++11 (and deprecated in C++03), but we accept it as an
extension.
llvm-svn: 280847
There is a bug causing pch to be validated even though -fno-validate-pch is set. This patch fixes it.
ASTReader relies on ASTReaderListener to initialize SuggestedPredefines, which is required for compilations using PCH. Before this change, PCHValidator is the default ASTReaderListener. After this change, when -fno-validate-pch is set, PCHValidator is disabled, but we need a replacement ASTReaderListener to initialize SuggestedPredefines. Class SimpleASTReaderListener is implemented for this purpose.
This change only affects -fno-validate-pch. There is no functional change if -fno-validate-pch is not set.
If -fno-validate-pch is not set, conflicts in predefined macros between pch and current compiler instance causes error.
If -fno-validate-pch is set, predefine macros in current compiler override those in pch so that compilation can continue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24054
llvm-svn: 280842
Summary:
C++1z 6.4.1/p2:
If the if statement is of the form if constexpr, the value of the
condition shall be a contextually converted constant expression of type
bool [...]
C++1z 5.20/p4:
[...] A contextually converted constant expression of type bool is an
expression, contextually converted to bool (Clause4), where the
converted expression is a constant expression and the conversion
sequence contains only the conversions above. [...]
Contextually converting result of an expression `e` to a Boolean value
requires `bool t(e)` to be well-formed.
An explicit conversion function is only considered as a user-defined
conversion for direct-initialization, which is essentially what
//contextually converted to bool// requires.
Also, fixes PR28470.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24158
llvm-svn: 280838
Move the logic for doing this from the ABI argument lowering into
EmitParmDecl, which runs for all parameters. Our codegen is slightly
suboptimal in this case, as we may leave behind a dead store after
optimization, but it's 32-bit inalloca, and this fixes the bug in a
robust way.
Fixes PR30293
llvm-svn: 280836
Summary: There was no definition for __nop function - added inline
assembly.
Patch by Albert Gutowski!
Reviewers: rnk, thakis
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24286
llvm-svn: 280826
Parse pragma intrinsic, display warning if the function isn't a builtin
function in clang and suggest including intrin.h.
Patch by Albert Gutowski!
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, rnk
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23944
llvm-svn: 280825
If the virtual method comes from a secondary vtable, then the type of
the 'this' parameter should be i8*, and not a pointer to the complete
class. In the MS ABI, the 'this' parameter on entry points to the vptr
containing the virtual method that was called, so we use i8* instead of
the normal type. We had a mismatch where the CGFunctionInfo of the call
didn't match the CGFunctionInfo of the declaration, and this resulted in
some assertions, but now both sides agree the type of 'this' is i8*.
Fixes one issue raised in PR30293
llvm-svn: 280815
OpenCL requires __ENDIAN_LITTLE__ be set for little endian targets.
The default for targets was also apparently big endian, so AMDGPU
was incorrectly reported as big endian. Set this from the triple
so targets don't have another place to set the endianness.
llvm-svn: 280787
copy-initialization. We previously got this wrong in a couple of ways:
- we only looked for copy / move constructors and constructor templates for
this copy, and thus would fail to copy in cases where doing so should use
some other constructor (but see core issue 670),
- we mishandled the special case for disabling user-defined conversions that
blocks infinite recursion through repeated application of a copy constructor
(applying it in slightly too many cases) -- though as far as I can tell,
this does not ever actually affect the result of overload resolution, and
- we misapplied the special-case rules for constructors taking a parameter
whose type is a (reference to) the same class type by incorrectly assuming
that only happens for copy/move constructors (it also happens for
constructors instantiated from templates and those inherited from base
classes).
These changes should only affect strange corner cases (for instance, where the
copy constructor exists but has a non-const-qualified parameter type), so for
the most part it only causes us to produce more 'candidate' notes, but see the
test changes for other cases whose behavior is affected.
llvm-svn: 280776
Summary:
When code contains a comment between `return` and the value:
return /* lengthy comment here */ (
lengthyValueComesHere);
Do not wrap before the comment, as that'd break the code through JS' automatic
semicolon insertion.
Reviewers: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24257
llvm-svn: 280730
When calling getMostRecentDecl, we can pull in more definitions from
a module. We call getPrimaryContext afterwards to make sure that
we buildLookup on a primary context.
rdar://27926200
llvm-svn: 280728
Use llvm::DINode::DIFlags type (strongly typed enum) for debug flags instead of unsigned int to avoid problems on platforms with sizeof(int) < 4: we already have flags with values > (1 << 16).
Patch by: Victor Leschuk <vleschuk@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23767
llvm-svn: 280701
Summary:
Remove access qualifiers on images in arg info metadata:
* kernel_arg_type
* kernel_arg_base_type
Image access qualifiers are inseparable from type in clang implementation,
but OpenCL spec provides a special query to get access qualifier
via clGetKernelArgInfo with CL_KERNEL_ARG_ACCESS_QUALIFIER.
Besides that OpenCL conformance test_api get_kernel_arg_info expects
image types without access qualifier.
Patch by Evgeniy Tyurin.
Reviewers: bader, yaxunl, Anastasia
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23915
llvm-svn: 280699
I'm in the progress of adding ARMv6 support to CloudABI. On the compiler
side, everything seems to work properly with this tiny change applied.
llvm-svn: 280672
This adds support for modules that require (non-)freestanding
environment, such as the compiler builtin mm_malloc submodule.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23871
llvm-svn: 280613
Some Windows SDK classes, for example
Windows::Storage::Streams::IBufferByteAccess, use the ATL way of spelling
attributes:
[uuid("....")] class IBufferByteAccess {};
To be able to use __uuidof() to grab the uuid off these types, clang needs to
support uuid as a Microsoft attribute. There was already code to skip Microsoft
attributes, extend that to look for uuid and parse it. Use the new "Microsoft"
attribute type added in r280575 (and r280574, r280576) for this.
Final part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23895
llvm-svn: 280578
There was already a function that moved attributes off the declspec into
an attribute list for attributes applying to the type, teach that function to
also move Microsoft attributes around and rename it to match its new broader
role.
Nothing uses Microsoft attributes yet, so no behavior change.
Part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23895
llvm-svn: 280576
into ParseDeclOrFunctionDefInternal() (which is called by
MaybeParseMicrosoftAttributes()), so that the attributes can be stored in
the DeclSpec. No behavior change yet, part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23895
llvm-svn: 280574
The comment starting with "ParseDeclarationOrFunctionDefinition -" is above
a function called ParseDeclOrFunctionDefInternal. Fix the comment by not
mentioning a function name, like the style guide requests nowadays. No behavior
change.
llvm-svn: 280572
We have invariants we like to guarantee for the
`ImplicitConversionKind`s in a `StandardConversionSequence`. These
weren't being upheld in code that r280553 touched, so Richard suggested
that we should fix that. See D24113.
I'm not entirely sure how to go about testing this, so no test case is
included. Suggestions welcome.
llvm-svn: 280562
This patch allows us to perform incompatible pointer conversions when
resolving overloads in C. So, the following code will no longer fail to
compile (though it will still emit warnings, assuming the user hasn't
opted out of them):
```
void foo(char *) __attribute__((overloadable));
void foo(int) __attribute__((overloadable));
void callFoo() {
unsigned char bar[128];
foo(bar); // selects the char* overload.
}
```
These conversions are ranked below all others, so:
A. Any other viable conversion will win out
B. If we had another incompatible pointer conversion in the example
above (e.g. `void foo(int *)`), we would complain about
an ambiguity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24113
llvm-svn: 280553
Summary:
This attribute specifies expectations about the initialization of static and
thread local variables. Specifically that the variable has a
[constant initializer](http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/constant_initialization)
according to the rules of [basic.start.static]. Failure to meet this expectation
will result in an error.
Static objects with constant initializers avoid hard-to-find bugs caused by
the indeterminate order of dynamic initialization. They can also be safely
used by other static constructors across translation units.
This attribute acts as a compile time assertion that the requirements
for constant initialization have been met. Since these requirements change
between dialects and have subtle pitfalls it's important to fail fast instead
of silently falling back on dynamic initialization.
```c++
// -std=c++14
#define SAFE_STATIC __attribute__((require_constant_initialization)) static
struct T {
constexpr T(int) {}
~T();
};
SAFE_STATIC T x = {42}; // OK.
SAFE_STATIC T y = 42; // error: variable does not have a constant initializer
// copy initialization is not a constant expression on a non-literal type.
```
This attribute can only be applied to objects with static or thread-local storage
duration.
Reviewers: majnemer, rsmith, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: jroelofs, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23385
llvm-svn: 280525
Summary:
This attribute specifies expectations about the initialization of static and
thread local variables. Specifically that the variable has a
[constant initializer](http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/constant_initialization)
according to the rules of [basic.start.static]. Failure to meet this expectation
will result in an error.
Static objects with constant initializers avoid hard-to-find bugs caused by
the indeterminate order of dynamic initialization. They can also be safely
used by other static constructors across translation units.
This attribute acts as a compile time assertion that the requirements
for constant initialization have been met. Since these requirements change
between dialects and have subtle pitfalls it's important to fail fast instead
of silently falling back on dynamic initialization.
```c++
// -std=c++14
#define SAFE_STATIC __attribute__((require_constant_initialization)) static
struct T {
constexpr T(int) {}
~T();
};
SAFE_STATIC T x = {42}; // OK.
SAFE_STATIC T y = 42; // error: variable does not have a constant initializer
// copy initialization is not a constant expression on a non-literal type.
```
This attribute can only be applied to objects with static or thread-local storage
duration.
Reviewers: majnemer, rsmith, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: jroelofs, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23385
llvm-svn: 280516
Summary:
When formatting source code that needs both requoting and reindentation,
merge the replacements to avoid erroring out for conflicting replacements.
Also removes the misleading Replacements parameter from the
TokenAnalyzer API.
Reviewers: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24155
llvm-svn: 280487
Summary:
Default imports appear outside of named bindings in curly braces:
import A from 'a';
import A, {symbol} from 'a';
Reviewers: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23973
llvm-svn: 280486
Summary:
User feedback is that they expect *all* imports to be sorted if any import was
affected by a change, not just imports up to the first non-affected line, as
clang-format currently does.
Reviewers: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23972
llvm-svn: 280485
look for a corresponding file, since we're not going to read it anyway.
No observable behavior change (though we now avoid pointlessly trying to stat
or open a file named "-").
llvm-svn: 280436
during this function, and to avoid rolling back changes to the module manager's
data structures. Instead, we defer registering the module file until after we
have successfully finished loading it.
llvm-svn: 280434
The class MismatchingNewDeleteDetector is in
lib/Sema/SemaExprCXX.cpp inside the anonymous namespace.
This diff reorders the fields and removes the excessive padding.
Test plan: make -j8 check-clang
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23898
llvm-svn: 280426
Summary:
We want wasm and asmjs to have matching ABIs, and right now asmjs uses
unsigned int for its size_t. This causes exported symbols in libcxx to
not match and can cause weird breakage where libcxx doesn't get linked
as a result. Long-term we probably want wasm32, wasm64, and asmjs to
all use unsigned long, but that would cause unnecessary ABI churn for
asmjs so defer that until we can make all the ABI changes at once.
Patch by Jacob Gravelle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24134
llvm-svn: 280420
textually included, create an ImportDecl just as we would if we reached a
#include of any other modular header. This is necessary in order to correctly
determine the set of variables to initialize for an imported module.
This should hopefully make the modules selfhost buildbot green again.
llvm-svn: 280409
This patch also introduces AnalysisOrderChecker which is intended for testing
of callback call correctness.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23804
llvm-svn: 280367
Some FileIDs that may be used by PlistDiagnostics were not added while building
a list of pieces. This caused assertion violation in GetFID() function.
This patch adds some missing FileIDs to avoid the assertion. It also contains
small refactoring of PlistDiagnostics::FlushDiagnosticsImpl().
Patch by Aleksei Sidorin, Ilya Palachev.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22090
llvm-svn: 280360