For an init capture, process the initialization expression
right away. For lambda init-captures such as the following:
const int x = 10;
auto L = [i = x+1](int a) {
return [j = x+2,
&k = x](char b) { };
};
keep in mind that each lambda init-capture has to have:
- its initialization expression executed in the context
of the enclosing/parent decl-context.
- but the variable itself has to be 'injected' into the
decl-context of its lambda's call-operator (which has
not yet been created).
Each init-expression is a full-expression that has to get
Sema-analyzed (for capturing etc.) before its lambda's
call-operator's decl-context, scope & scopeinfo are pushed on their
respective stacks. Thus if any variable is odr-used in the init-capture
it will correctly get captured in the enclosing lambda, if one exists.
The init-variables above are created later once the lambdascope and
call-operators decl-context is pushed onto its respective stack.
Since the lambda init-capture's initializer expression occurs in the
context of the enclosing function or lambda, therefore we can not wait
till a lambda scope has been pushed on before deciding whether the
variable needs to be captured. We also need to process all
lvalue-to-rvalue conversions and discarded-value conversions,
so that we can avoid capturing certain constant variables.
For e.g.,
void test() {
const int x = 10;
auto L = [&z = x](char a) { <-- don't capture by the current lambda
return [y = x](int i) { <-- don't capture by enclosing lambda
return y;
}
};
If x was not const, the second use would require 'L' to capture, and
that would be an error.
Make sure TranformLambdaExpr is also aware of this.
Patch approved by Richard (Thanks!!)
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2092
llvm-svn: 196454
We would skip until the next comma, hoping good things whould lie there,
however this would fail when we have such things as this:
struct A {};
template <typename>
struct D;
template <>
struct D<C> : B, A::D;
Once this happens, we would believe that D with a nested namespace
specifier of A was a variable that was being declared. We would go on
to complain that there was an extraneous 'template <>' on their variable
declaration.
Crashes would happen when 'A' gets defined as 'enum class A {}' as
various asserts would fire.
Instead, we should skip up until the semicolon if we see that we are in
the middle of a definition and the current token is a ':'
This fixes PR17084.
llvm-svn: 196453
nested-name-specifier, rather than crashing. (In fact, reject all
literal-operator-ids that have a non-namespace nested-name-specifier). The
grammar doesn't allow these in some cases, and in other cases does allow them
but instantiation will always fail.
llvm-svn: 196443
which specifies couple of (optional) method selectors
for bridging a CFobject to or from an ObjectiveC
object. This is wip. // rdsr://15499111
llvm-svn: 196408
In delayed template parsing mode, adjust the template depth counter for each template parameter list associated with an out of line member template specialization.
llvm-svn: 196351
clang converts keywords to identifiers for compatibility with various system
headers such as GNU libc.
Implement a -Wkeyword-compat extension warning to diagnose those cases. The
warning is on by default but will generally be ignored in system headers. It
can however be enabled globally to aid standards conformance testing.
This also changes the __uptr keyword avoidance from r195710 to no longer
special-case system headers, bringing it in line with other similar workarounds
in clang.
Implementation returns bool for symmetry with token annotation functions.
Some examples:
warning: keyword '__is_pod' will be treated as an identifier for the remainder of the translation unit [-Wkeyword-compat]
struct __is_pod
warning: keyword '__uptr' will be treated as an identifier here [-Wkeyword-compat]
union w *__uptr;
llvm-svn: 196212
lookup, if parsing failed, we did not restore the lexer state properly, and
eventually crashed. This change ensures that we always consume all the tokens
from the new token stream we started to parse the name from inline asm.
llvm-svn: 196182
GNU libc uses '__uptr' as a member name in C mode, conflicting with the
eponymous MSVC pointer modifier keyword.
Detect and mark the token as an identifier when these specific conditions are
met. __uptr will continue to work as a keyword for the remainder of the
translation unit.
Fixes PR17824.
llvm-svn: 195710
MSVC applies these to the following declaration only if present, otherwise
silently ignores them whereas we'll issue a warning.
Handling differs from ordinary attributes appearing in the same place, so add a
Sema test to make sure we get it right.
llvm-svn: 195577
module. Use the marker to diagnose cases where we try to transition between
submodules when not at the top level (most likely because a closing brace was
missing at the end of a header file, but is also possible if submodule headers
attempt to do something fundamentally non-modular, like our .def files).
llvm-svn: 195543
and we see an ill-formed declarator that would probably be well-formed if the
tag definition were just missing a semicolon, use that as the diagnostic
instead of producing some other mysterious error.
llvm-svn: 195163
the GNU documentation: the attribute only appertains to the label if it is
followed by a semicolon. Based on a patch by Aaron Ballman!
llvm-svn: 194869
representing the module import rather than making the module immediately
visible. This serves two goals:
* It avoids making declarations in the module visible prematurely, if we
walk past the #include during a tentative parse, for instance, and
* It gives a diagnostic (although, admittedly, not a very nice one) if
a header with a corresponding module is included anywhere other than
at the top level.
llvm-svn: 194782
This patch fixes PR8264. Duplicate qualifiers already are diagnozed,
now the same diagnostics is issued for duplicate function specifiers.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2025
llvm-svn: 194559
definition. If we see something that looks like a namespace definition inside a
class, that strongly indicates that a close brace was missing somewhere.
llvm-svn: 194319
Summary:
Similar to __FUNCTION__, MSVC exposes the name of the enclosing mangled
function name via __FUNCDNAME__. This implementation is very naive and
unoptimized, it is expected that __FUNCDNAME__ would be used rarely in
practice.
Reviewers: rnk, rsmith, thakis
CC: cfe-commits, silvas
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2109
llvm-svn: 194181
Similar C code isn't caught as it seems to hit a different code path.
Also, as the check is only done for record pointers, cases involving
an overloaded operator-> are not handled either. Note that the reason
this check is done in the parser instead of Sema is not related to
having enough knowledge about the current state as it is about being
able to fix up the parser's state to be able to recover and traverse the
correct code paths.
llvm-svn: 194002
- can't think of a way to test this without generic lambda captures, but will include a test once that patch is made commit-ready.
patch was ok'd by Doug.
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2029
llvm-svn: 193757
into a separate "parse an attribute that takes a type argument" codepath. This
results in both codepaths being a lot cleaner and simpler, and fixes some bugs
where the type argument handling bled into the expression argument handling and
caused us to both accept invalid and reject valid attribute arguments.
llvm-svn: 193731
It's possible to embed the frontend in applications that haven't initialized
backend targets so we need to handle this condition gracefully.
llvm-svn: 193685
which we don't think can't have one, only allow it in the tiny number of
attributes which opts into this weird parse rule.
I've manually checked that the handlers for all these attributes can in fact
cope with an identifier as the argument. This is still somewhat terrible; we
should move more fully towards picking the parsing rules based on the
attribute, and make the Parse -> Sema interface more type-safe.
llvm-svn: 193295
Commit r191484 treated constexpr function templates as normal function
templates with respect to delaying their parsing. However, this is
unnecessarily restrictive because there is no compatibility concern with
constexpr, MSVC doesn't support it.
Instead, simply disable delayed template parsing for constexpr function
templates. This largely reverts the changes made in r191484 but keeps
it's unit test.
This fixes PR17661.
llvm-svn: 193274
This patch wasn't reviewed, and isn't correctly preserving the behaviors
relied upon by QT. I don't have a direct example of fallout, but it
should go through the standard code review process. For example, it
should never have removed the QT test case that was added when fixing
those users.
llvm-svn: 193174
This is a fix to PR17649, caused by fix in r193073. QT uses 'break' statement
to implement their 'foreach' macro. To enable build of QT, this fix reenables
break but only in 'for' statement specifier and only in the third expression.
llvm-svn: 193170
Due to statement expressions supported as GCC extension, it is possible
to put 'break' or 'continue' into a loop/switch statement but outside its
body, for example:
for ( ; ({ if (first) { first = 0; continue; } 0; }); )
Such usage must be diagnosed as an error, GCC rejects it. To recognize
this and similar patterns the flags BreakScope and ContinueScope are
temporarily turned off while parsing condition expression.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1762
llvm-svn: 193073
r177003 applied the late parsed template technique to friend functions
but omitted the corresponding check for redefinitions.
This patch adds the same check already in use for templates to the
new code path in order to diagnose and reject invalid redefinitions
that were being silently accepted.
Fixes PR17324.
Reviewed by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 192948
Summary: Some MS headers use these features.
Reviewers: rnk, rsmith
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1948
llvm-svn: 192936