to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
Summary:
log() is split into four functions:
- elog()/log()/vlog() have different severity levels, allowing filtering
- dlog() is a lazy macro which uses LLVM_DEBUG - it logs to the logger, but
conditionally based on -debug-only flag and is omitted in release builds
All logging functions use formatv-style format strings now, e.g:
log("Could not resolve URI {0}: {1}", URI, Result.takeError());
Existing log sites have been split between elog/log/vlog by best guess.
This includes a workaround for passing Error to formatv that can be
simplified when D49170 or similar lands.
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, javed.absar, ioeric, MaskRay, jkorous, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49008
llvm-svn: 336785
Summary:
Instead of passing Context explicitly around, we now have a thread-local
Context object `Context::current()` which is an implicit argument to
every function.
Most manipulation of this should use the WithContextValue helper, which
augments the current Context to add a single KV pair, and restores the
old context on destruction.
Advantages are:
- less boilerplate in functions that just propagate contexts
- reading most code doesn't require understanding context at all, and
using context as values in fewer places still
- fewer options to pass the "wrong" context when it changes within a
scope (e.g. when using Span)
- contexts pass through interfaces we can't modify, such as VFS
- propagating contexts across threads was slightly tricky (e.g.
copy vs move, no move-init in lambdas), and is now encapsulated in
the threadpool
Disadvantages are all the usual TLS stuff - hidden magic, and
potential for higher memory usage on threads that don't use the
context. (In practice, it's just one pointer)
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: klimek, jkorous-apple, ioeric, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42517
llvm-svn: 323872