Commit Graph

28 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Douglas Gregor 2ec748cd5a Implement explicit instantiations of member classes of class templates, e.g.,
template<typename T>
  struct X {
    struct Inner;
  };

  template struct X<int>::Inner;

This change is larger than it looks because it also fixes some
a problem with nested-name-specifiers and tags. We weren't requiring
the DeclContext associated with the scope specifier of a tag to be
complete. Therefore, when looking for something like "struct
X<int>::Inner", we weren't instantiating X<int>. 

This, naturally, uncovered a problem with member pointers, where we
were requiring the left-hand side of a member pointer access
expression (e.g., x->*) to be a complete type. However, this is wrong:
the semantics of this expression does not require a complete type (EDG
agrees).

Stuart vouched for me. Blame him.

llvm-svn: 71756
2009-05-14 00:28:11 +00:00
Douglas Gregor c9f9b86732 Implement the notions of the "current instantiation" and "unknown
specialization" within a C++ template, and permit name lookup into the
current instantiation. For example, given:

  template<typename T, typename U>
  struct X {
    typedef T type;

    X* x1;  // current instantiation
    X<T, U> *x2; // current instantiation
    X<U, T> *x3; // not current instantiation
    ::X<type, U> *x4; // current instantiation
    X<typename X<type, U>::type, U>: *x5; // current instantiation
  };

llvm-svn: 71471
2009-05-11 19:58:34 +00:00
Anders Carlsson bb1e4724f1 More improvements to namespace aliases. We now support everything except aliases in using directives.
llvm-svn: 67966
2009-03-28 23:53:49 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 333489bba3 Initial implementation of parsing, semantic analysis, and template
instantiation for C++ typename-specifiers such as

  typename T::type

The parsing of typename-specifiers is relatively easy thanks to
annotation tokens. When we see the "typename", we parse the
typename-specifier and produce a typename annotation token. There are
only a few places where we need to handle this. We currently parse the
typename-specifier form that terminates in an identifier, but not the
simple-template-id form, e.g.,

  typename T::template apply<U, V>

Parsing of nested-name-specifiers has a similar problem, since at this
point we don't have any representation of a class template
specialization whose template-name is unknown.

Semantic analysis is only partially complete, with some support for
template instantiation that works for simple examples. 

llvm-svn: 67875
2009-03-27 23:10:48 +00:00
Douglas Gregor c23500ebb3 Simplify CXXScopeSpec a lot. No more weird SmallVector-like hacks here
llvm-svn: 67800
2009-03-26 23:56:24 +00:00
Douglas Gregor f21eb49a04 Revamp our representation of C++ nested-name-specifiers. We now have a
uniqued representation that should both save some memory and make it
far easier to properly build canonical types for types involving
dependent nested-name-specifiers, e.g., "typename T::Nested::type".

This approach will greatly simplify the representation of
CXXScopeSpec. That'll be next.

llvm-svn: 67799
2009-03-26 23:50:42 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 90a1a65194 Introduce a new expression type, UnresolvedDeclRefExpr, that describes
dependent qualified-ids such as

  Fibonacci<N - 1>::value

where N is a template parameter. These references are "unresolved"
because the name is dependent and, therefore, cannot be resolved to a
declaration node (as we would do for a DeclRefExpr or
QualifiedDeclRefExpr). UnresolvedDeclRefExprs instantiate to
DeclRefExprs, QualifiedDeclRefExprs, etc.

Also, be a bit more careful about keeping only a single set of
specializations for a class template, and instantiating from the
definition of that template rather than a previous declaration. In
general, we need a better solution for this for all TagDecls, because
it's too easy to accidentally look at a declaration that isn't the
definition.

We can now process a simple Fibonacci computation described as a
template metaprogram.

llvm-svn: 67308
2009-03-19 17:26:29 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 5253768ada Introduce a representation for types that we referred to via a
qualified name, e.g., 

  foo::x

so that we retain the nested-name-specifier as written in the source
code and can reproduce that qualified name when printing the types
back (e.g., in diagnostics). This is PR3493, which won't be complete
until finished the other tasks mentioned near the end of this commit.

The parser's representation of nested-name-specifiers, CXXScopeSpec,
is now a bit fatter, because it needs to contain the scopes that
precede each '::' and keep track of whether the global scoping
operator '::' was at the beginning. For example, we need to keep track
of the leading '::', 'foo', and 'bar' in
 
  ::foo::bar::x

The Action's CXXScopeTy * is no longer a DeclContext *. It's now the
opaque version of the new NestedNameSpecifier, which contains a single
component of a nested-name-specifier (either a DeclContext * or a Type
*, bitmangled). 

The new sugar type QualifiedNameType composes a sequence of
NestedNameSpecifiers with a representation of the type we're actually
referring to. At present, we only build QualifiedNameType nodes within
Sema::getTypeName. This will be extended to other type-constructing
actions (e.g., ActOnClassTemplateId).

Also on the way: QualifiedDeclRefExprs will also store a sequence of
NestedNameSpecifiers, so that we can print out the property
nested-name-specifier. I expect to also use this for handling
dependent names like Fibonacci<I - 1>::value.

llvm-svn: 67265
2009-03-19 00:18:19 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 6bfde496ee The scope representation can now be either a DeclContext pointer or a
Type pointer. This allows our nested-name-specifiers to retain more
information about the actual spelling (e.g., which typedef did the
user name, or what exact template arguments were used in the
template-id?). It will also allow us to have dependent
nested-name-specifiers that don't map to any DeclContext.

llvm-svn: 67140
2009-03-18 00:36:05 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 2689746705 Add basic, hackish support for instantiation of typedefs in a class
template. More importantly, start to sort out the issues regarding
complete types and nested-name-specifiers, especially the question of:
when do we instantiate a class template specialization that occurs to
the left of a '::' in a nested-name-specifier?

llvm-svn: 66662
2009-03-11 16:48:53 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 7f74112756 Implement parsing of nested-name-specifiers that involve template-ids, e.g.,
std::vector<int>::allocator_type

When we parse a template-id that names a type, it will become either a
template-id annotation (which is a parsed representation of a
template-id that has not yet been through semantic analysis) or a
typename annotation (where semantic analysis has resolved the
template-id to an actual type), depending on the context. We only
produce a type in contexts where we know that we only need type
information, e.g., in a type specifier. Otherwise, we create a
template-id annotation that can later be "upgraded" by transforming it
into a typename annotation when the parser needs a type. This occurs,
for example, when we've parsed "std::vector<int>" above and then see
the '::' after it. However, it means that when writing something like
this:

  template<> class Outer::Inner<int> { ... };

We have two tokens to represent Outer::Inner<int>: one token for the
nested name specifier Outer::, and one template-id annotation token
for Inner<int>, which will be passed to semantic analysis to define
the class template specialization.

Most of the churn in the template tests in this patch come from an
improvement in our error recovery from ill-formed template-ids.

llvm-svn: 65467
2009-02-25 19:37:18 +00:00
Cedric Venet 08438133da Add svn:eol-style=native to some files
Correct two files with inconsistent lines endings.

llvm-svn: 64564
2009-02-14 20:20:19 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 2ada048975 Some name-lookup-related fixes, from Piotr Rak!
- Changes Lookup*Name functions to return NamedDecls, instead of
Decls. Unfortunately my recent statement that it will simplify lot of
code, was not quite right, but it simplifies some...
- Makes MergeLookupResult SmallPtrSet instead of vector, following
Douglas suggestions.
- Adds %qN format for printing qualified names to Diagnostic.
- Avoids searching for using-directives in Scopes, which are not
DeclScope, during unqualified name lookup.

llvm-svn: 63739
2009-02-04 17:27:36 +00:00
Douglas Gregor ed8f288708 Eliminated LookupCriteria, whose creation was causing a bottleneck for
LookupName et al. Instead, use an enum and a bool to describe its
contents.

Optimized the C/Objective-C path through LookupName, eliminating any
unnecessarily C++isms. Simplify IdentifierResolver::iterator, removing
some code and arguments that are no longer used.

Eliminated LookupDeclInScope/LookupDeclInContext, moving all callers
over to LookupName, LookupQualifiedName, or LookupParsedName, as
appropriate.

All together, I'm seeing a 0.2% speedup on Cocoa.h with PTH and
-disable-free. Plus, we're down to three name-lookup routines.

llvm-svn: 63354
2009-01-30 01:04:22 +00:00
Chris Lattner 60f36223a9 move library-specific diagnostic headers into library private dirs. Reduce
redundant #includes.  Patch by Anders Johnsen!

llvm-svn: 63271
2009-01-29 05:15:15 +00:00
Chris Lattner 7368d581c1 Split the single monolithic DiagnosticKinds.def file into one
.def file for each library.  This means that adding a diagnostic
to sema doesn't require all the other libraries to be rebuilt.

Patch by Anders Johnsen!

llvm-svn: 63111
2009-01-27 18:30:58 +00:00
Sebastian Redl 9ed6efdd75 Add support for declaring pointers to members.
Add serialization support for ReferenceType.

llvm-svn: 62934
2009-01-24 21:16:55 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 3407432644 Refactor name lookup.
This change refactors and cleans up our handling of name lookup with
LookupDecl. There are several aspects to this refactoring:

  - The criteria for name lookup is now encapsulated into the class
  LookupCriteria, which replaces the hideous set of boolean values
  that LookupDecl currently has.

  - The results of name lookup are returned in a new class
  LookupResult, which can lazily build OverloadedFunctionDecls for
  overloaded function sets (and, eventually, eliminate the need to
  allocate member for OverloadedFunctionDecls) and contains a
  placeholder for handling ambiguous name lookup (for C++).

  - The primary entry points for name lookup are now LookupName (for
    unqualified name lookup) and LookupQualifiedName (for qualified
    name lookup). There is also a convenience function
    LookupParsedName that handles qualified/unqualified name lookup
    when given a scope specifier. Together, these routines are meant
    to gradually replace the kludgy LookupDecl, but this won't happen
    until after we have base class lookup (which forces us to cope
    with ambiguities).

  - Documented the heck out of name lookup. Experimenting a little
    with using Doxygen's member groups to make some sense of the Sema
    class. Feedback welcome!

  - Fixes some lingering issues with name lookup for
  nested-name-specifiers, which now goes through
  LookupName/LookupQualifiedName. 

llvm-svn: 62245
2009-01-14 22:20:51 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 82ac25e4a7 Unify the code for defining tags in C and C++, so that we always
introduce a Scope for the body of a tag. This reduces the number of
semantic differences between C and C++ structs and unions, and will
help with other features (e.g., anonymous unions) in C. Some important
points:

  - Fields are now in the "member" namespace (IDNS_Member), to keep
    them separate from tags and ordinary names in C. See the new test
    in Sema/member-reference.c for an example of why this matters. In
    C++, ordinary and member name lookup will find members in both the
    ordinary and member namespace, so the difference between
    IDNS_Member and IDNS_Ordinary is erased by Sema::LookupDecl (but
    only in C++!). 
  - We always introduce a Scope and push a DeclContext when we're
    defining a tag, in both C and C++. Previously, we had different
    actions and different Scope/CurContext behavior for enums, C
    structs/unions, and C++ structs/unions/classes. Now, it's one pair
    of actions. (Yay!)

There's still some fuzziness in the handling of struct/union/enum
definitions within other struct/union/enum definitions in C. We'll
need to do some more cleanup to eliminate some reliance on CurContext
before we can solve this issue for real. What we want is for something
like this:

  struct X {
    struct T { int x; } t;
  };

to introduce T into translation unit scope (placing it at the
appropriate point in the IdentifierResolver chain, too), but it should
still have struct X as its lexical declaration
context. PushOnScopeChains isn't smart enough to do that yet, though,
so there's a FIXME test in nested-redef.c

llvm-svn: 61940
2009-01-08 20:45:30 +00:00
Steve Naroff 35c62ae632 This is a large/messy diff that unifies the ObjC AST's with DeclContext.
- ObjCContainerDecl's (ObjCInterfaceDecl/ObjCCategoryDecl/ObjCProtocolDecl), ObjCCategoryImpl, & ObjCImplementation are all DeclContexts.
- ObjCMethodDecl is now a ScopedDecl (so it can play nicely with DeclContext).
- ObjCContainerDecl now does iteration/lookup using DeclContext infrastructure (no more linear search:-)
- Removed ASTContext argument to DeclContext::lookup(). It wasn't being used and complicated it's use from an ObjC AST perspective.
- Added Sema::ProcessPropertyDecl() and removed Sema::diagnosePropertySetterGetterMismatch().
- Simplified Sema::ActOnAtEnd() considerably. Still more work to do.
- Fixed an incorrect casting assumption in Sema::getCurFunctionOrMethodDecl(), now that ObjCMethodDecl is a ScopedDecl.
- Removed addPropertyMethods from ObjCInterfaceDecl/ObjCCategoryDecl/ObjCProtocolDecl.

This passes all the tests on my machine. Since many of the changes are central to the way ObjC finds it's methods, I expect some fallout (and there are still a handful of FIXME's). Nevertheless, this should be a step in the right direction.

llvm-svn: 61929
2009-01-08 17:28:14 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 4d87df5853 Delay parsing of default arguments of member functions until the class
is completely defined (C++ [class.mem]p2).

Reverse the order in which we process the definitions of member
functions specified inline. This way, we'll get diagnostics in the
order in which the member functions were declared in the class.

llvm-svn: 61103
2008-12-16 21:30:33 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 195002917e Partial fix for qualified name lookup, such that the lookup of N in
N::X only skips those entities specified in C++ [basic.lookup.qual]p1.

Note that both EDG and GCC currently get this wrong. EDG has confirmed
that the bug will be fixed in a future version.

llvm-svn: 61079
2008-12-16 06:37:47 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 29e174cc58 Make name lookup when we're inside a declarator's scope, such as ClassName::func, work with the new unqualified name lookup code. Test it with default arguments in out-of-line member definitions
llvm-svn: 61060
2008-12-16 00:38:16 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 7a4fad1b0b Address some comments on the name lookup/DeclContext patch from Chris
llvm-svn: 60897
2008-12-11 20:41:00 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 91f84216f7 Unifies the name-lookup mechanisms used in various parts of the AST
and separates lexical name lookup from qualified name lookup. In
particular:
  * Make DeclContext the central data structure for storing and
    looking up declarations within existing declarations, e.g., members
    of structs/unions/classes, enumerators in C++0x enums, members of
    C++ namespaces, and (later) members of Objective-C
    interfaces/implementations. DeclContext uses a lazily-constructed
    data structure optimized for fast lookup (array for small contexts,
    hash table for larger contexts). 

  * Implement C++ qualified name lookup in terms of lookup into
    DeclContext.

  * Implement C++ unqualified name lookup in terms of
    qualified+unqualified name lookup (since unqualified lookup is not
    purely lexical in C++!)

  * Limit the use of the chains of declarations stored in
    IdentifierInfo to those names declared lexically.

  * Eliminate CXXFieldDecl, collapsing its behavior into
    FieldDecl. (FieldDecl is now a ScopedDecl).

  * Make RecordDecl into a DeclContext and eliminates its
    Members/NumMembers fields (since one can just iterate through the
    DeclContext to get the fields).

llvm-svn: 60878
2008-12-11 16:49:14 +00:00
Chris Lattner 4bd8dd8568 stop calling II::getName() unnecesarily in sema
llvm-svn: 59609
2008-11-19 08:23:25 +00:00
Douglas Gregor ae2fbad373 Updated IdentifierResolver to deal with DeclarationNames. The names of
C++ constructors, destructors, and conversion functions now have a
FETokenInfo field that IdentifierResolver can access, so that these
special names are handled just like ordinary identifiers. A few other
Sema routines now use DeclarationNames instead of IdentifierInfo*'s.

To validate this design, this code also implements parsing and
semantic analysis for id-expressions that name conversion functions,
e.g.,

  return operator bool();

The new parser action ActOnConversionFunctionExpr takes the result of
parsing "operator type-id" and turning it into an expression, using
the IdentifierResolver with the DeclarationName of the conversion
function. ActOnDeclarator pushes those conversion function names into
scope so that the IdentifierResolver can find them, of course.

llvm-svn: 59462
2008-11-17 20:34:05 +00:00
Argyrios Kyrtzidis 16ac9be7f0 Implement Sema support for C++ nested-name-specifiers.
llvm-svn: 58916
2008-11-08 17:17:31 +00:00